Capped off a fine birthday week by joining about a 100 new and old 
randonneurs on the 2013 SF Randonneurs Fall Populaire.  Starting in San 
Fransisco's Crissy Field, we headed north over the Golden Gate Bridge, 
hopped over a hill or two and looped out around China Camp Village before 
heading westward (back into a mild headwind and increasing fog) to the most 
distant control at Nicasio.  Then headed back through the San Geronimo 
Valley to Fairfax and the obscure but direct route back to San Francisco.  
Course was about 70 miles, punctuated by appropriate stops for controls and 
caloric intake.  

Had spent a too-long chunk of Friday running down some technical anomalies 
on the Quickbeam.  The chain was too worn to trust for the course and after 
removing it, I realized what a thought was a bent guard ring proved to be a 
more ingrained issue.  I'm still not completely sure of the cause, but the 
whole arm/spider has a bit of a wobble to it.  The working theory had been 
a bent BB spindle, found that the same arm wiggled no matter which bicycle 
it was mounted on (had stripped off the cranks from the 
waiting-for-Brooks-to-finally-call-me-back-so-I-can-deal-with-the-broken-rails 
Hilsen, assuming I'd be swapping the BB over).  Cursed and pondered and 
decided to clean up the Hilsen and swap over the saddle from the QB.  And 
the Hilsen ended up in a nicely stripped down mode - with the recently 
cleaned and rewaxed Baggins Banana Bag attached, it would hold my ritual 
two-tubes-two-patch-kits offering for any brevet ride, as well as 
appropriate gear for a mild, mid-September ride.  So, all that remained was 
getting up, getting the dogs walked and fed, and hightailing it into the 
city for the ride.  

Which pretty much is where I started - sipping strong coffee from a thermos 
cup as riders gathered in the fog on the generally unpopulated East Beach 
at Crissy Field.  I'd arrived past some significant parking infrastructure 
- mobile gates and grates and cones and hi-viz folks with flags and 
flashlights.  No, the Populaire does not typically generate that much 
traffic, but they've been racing these sail-driven projectiles within yards 
of the shore over the past couple weeks, and in another few hours, parking 
would become absolutely nonexistent. 

Signed in and got my card.  Realized I had absoutely nothing to write with 
- DOH! - so I would be relying on the kindness of others to supply a pen at 
the Nicasio Info Control.  After returning the coffee rental, I saw that a 
larger pack had amassed, and RBA (Regional Brevet Administrator) Rob Hawks 
welcomed the new riders (about half the group) and led us in our pledge 
"not to do anything stupid" before sending us out on the course.  Just 
about that time, I darned near stepped on ride buddy JimG (yojimg.net) and 
we greeted one another warmly.  He was anticpating the inaugural ride on 
his Box Dog Bikes Pelican.  

Of course, we immediately got separated as everyone picked up their bikes 
and wove their way to the road. I had decided to under-do things for the 
first bits, as I wasn't sure how I'd feel.  For some reason, the switch 
from fixed-gear (the Quickbeam) to a many-geared-coastable setup can mean a 
very clunky first ride, as I overdo it in the big gears and feel a loss of 
momentum when climbing.  And I also realized it was probably my longest 
ride of the year so far.  At least I'd managed a couple of 50+ rides on the 
QB, even though some of the steeper climbs were prone to cussing and 
stopping. 

 Rolled up to the bridge with a variety of SF Jerseyed folks and 
well-appointed rigs.  Counted at least 3 or 4 Hilsens without even looking 
for them.  Coughed and woke up and worked my way over the span and down 
into Sausalito with a minimum of extra effort.  Seemed to just make every 
yellow light on Bridgeway, which put me alone along the Mill Valley Bike 
Path to the base of the first hill.  But as the light turned green JimG and 
a gang of folks joined me.  The Camino Alto hill kind of worked out the 
kinks, and I found some comfort climbing seated, which is not generally an 
option afforded by riding fixed.  Then buzzed down the descent while 
thanking the density of my bones.  Caught up to the JimG group and promptly 
lost them on the climb to San Rafael, but by then I was feeling pretty good 
on the bike, almost like someone had flipped a switch.  As we headed around 
China Camp to the first control, I managed to tack onto a triplet-led 
(y'know, like a tandem but built for three) train and boogied along 
happily.  Fell back in with JimG and we found a mutually compatible pace, 
so we rolled to the first control, had RBA Rob sign/timestamp our cards and 
headed onward.  

As we pressed slightly uphill and upwind in Lucas Valley, JimG admitted he 
hadn't eaten anything for a while (turned out to be dinner or breakfast, 
so... yeah.) We deli-stopped and stretched out, chatted with a rider (whose 
name I forgot) on a custom ~75 cm frame and watched a few pods of riders 
work their way up the valley.  The chairs were in the warm sun, blocked 
from the cool wind by the building, and it was tempting just to enjoy the 
warm offerings of the morning.  But, we figured the miles wouldn't ride 
themselves, and remounted after a 15 minute break for food and drink. 

Climbed to Big Rock Ridge and collected a couple of other riders, then 
spread out once again on the long steady down valley run to Nicasio.  At 
the store, the randonneurs had arrived, ordering sandwiches, buying drinks 
and seeking the answer to the Information Control question.  Yes.  I did 
have to borrow a pen.  

Since the weather was still overcast and windily cool, we set off again.  
JimG still seemed at a bit of caloric deficit but we plugged along, picking 
up a few riders and benefitting from the energy as our group swelled and 
other riders joined us from behind.  The climb out of Nicasio to the San 
Geronimo valley spread us out again, but we swelled back up to 8-10 riders 
as we enjoyed the now-tailwind towards the White's Hill descent to 
Fairfax.  

The sun greeted us in town, and JimG and I peeled off to honor the siren 
song of Java Hut.  Strong coffee and gooey pastries awaited.  But, even 
better, they had broadened their offerings of late to include breakfast 
burritos.  Mmmmmm.   Potato, egg, black beans  for me and the simple 
cheese/egg muffin for JimG.  Such caloric density perked him up (as did the 
iced coffee) and we hummed our way back to the start.  Got to help with a 
small roadside repair (rattling fender) for another SFR member.  Met a few 
new randonneurs on the final miles to the last climb up from Sausalito and 
then went by everyone in the world who seemed to have shoehorned themselves 
to a vantage point to watch the sailboat race.  Dodging a few errant 
pedestrians and the expected rental bike erraticness, we dropped to the 
final control, were greeted with cheers and had always-smiling Carlos D. 
log in our return and verify our cards.  

Done, we found plates of food and fine camaraderie!  And I was happy to 
feel much better than I thought I would.  

My photos here: 
http://www.flickr.com/photos/cyclofiend/sets/72157635540840952/

More photos (including a couple group members!) courtesy of Deb Ford - 
http://goo.gl/H8UBBL <http://goo.gl/H8UBBL>

Rough Route Map - http://ridewithgps.com/routes/1798411

- Jim / cyclofiend.com


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