MA 300k Recap

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li...@jkassen.org

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Jun 3, 2012, 9:47:20 PM6/3/12
to NERds
26 brave riders started the 300k on Saturday morning which is excluding 7 of 24 riders who had preregistered but decided to sleep in. The forecast was not pretty and the weatherman was spot on. Light rain started at 4:15am and by 5am it was a downpour. The rain never let up once all day. Sometimes it would lighten to heavy sprinkles but mostly it was downpours heavy enough to penetrate even the zip lock bags holding the brevet cards. It was around 56 degrees when riders left Hanscom and it dropped to a low of 50 for much of the morning. This was the worst weather I've seen for a Brevet since I started riding in 2006. No one ever got a break.

We had 17 finishers who survived not just the rain but the climbs. As advertised, this was a hard ride -- one of the hardest NER had put since the fabled northern CT routes. Most riders stayed together in small groups and were generally in good spirits at the controls. A few of the controls offered hot soup which was popular along with the Little Debbie oatmeal pies, hot chocolate, and pizza at the finish.

I want to offer a huge thanks to Bruce Gellerman, Alan Day, Walter Page, and Emily O'Brien for their terrific support during the event. For Alan it was his first NER event ever. Bruce was kind enough to give a cold rider the pants off his legs and the gloves from his hands. Emily left Hanscom via bike herself at 3am in order to be at the first control to check riders in. Walter Page stayed up late driving riders in and waiting until everyone was safe and accounted for. All the volunteers spent the day in the rain without complaint and made the ride a success. I also want to thank the control stores (Tweedo's, Diemand Farm, and Dick's Bikes) for their gracious assistance.

Thanks to all the riders who came out for this ride. It takes a great deal of courage to start an event knowing what weather and hills await and all the riders deserve our admiration. The riders make the ride and these 26 riders are model randonneurs.

Feedback so far is that people seemed to be very happy with the calm traffic and scenery of the route but I did receive some valid criticism about the hilliness. For future revisions I'm considering going to Northfeild from Warwick and cutting out the dirt and some climbs on the last leg. Low traffic and nice scenery is inversely proportional to hills and pavement quality so this will always be a challenging event. That said I will try to refine the route to cut down some of the climbing while still sticking to the smallest of roads.

The preliminary results were posted 15 minutes after the ride ended on the MA 300k event page:

http://nerandonneurs.org/nersite/?p=48

Jake

Massimiliano Poletto

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Jun 3, 2012, 10:42:02 PM6/3/12
to li...@jkassen.org, NERds
That said I will try to refine the route to cut down some of the climbing while still sticking to the smallest of roads.

Don't cave!! :-)
 

Charles Coldwell

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Jun 3, 2012, 11:10:45 PM6/3/12
to max.p...@gmail.com, NERds

On Jun 3, 2012, at 10:42 PM, Massimiliano Poletto wrote:

> That said I will try to refine the route to cut down some of the climbing while still sticking to the smallest of roads.
>
> Don't cave!! :-)

Sometimes I wake up at night in a cold sweat screaming " Sylvestris Fire Road".

--
Charles M. Coldwell, W1CMC
"Turn on, log in, tune out"
Belmont, Massachusetts, New England (FN42jj)






Massimiliano Poletto

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Jun 3, 2012, 11:14:24 PM6/3/12
to Charles Coldwell, NERds
Oh come on! :)

I did that ride (http://ridebike.org/sfr/adventure/marin-mountains-200) yesterday, my first 200K since my hip fracture. I set no speed records (12:02), but it was lovely to be out.

max

Jon Doyle

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Jun 4, 2012, 3:16:21 PM6/4/12
to ne-rand...@googlegroups.com, li...@jkassen.org
Since Jake won't thank himself, I say big thanks to Jake for making this 300k happen! I hear it requires a bit of time and work, and the weather couldn't have been helpful. So I tip my waterlogged cap to Jake and all 300k volunteers : )

Jon
Watertown, MA

Bruce...@gdc4s.com

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Jun 5, 2012, 9:08:53 AM6/5/12
to ne-rand...@googlegroups.com

> ATTN Bruce: Big thank you's

 

I'll redirect the thanks to Jake and the other volunteers...He did a lot of hard work getting the route approved, organizing and running it in available conditions.

 

thanks, Bruce

Emily O'Brien

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Jun 5, 2012, 10:32:32 PM6/5/12
to Bruce...@gdc4s.com, ne-rand...@googlegroups.com
From the perspective of the gal who lives with him, I'll second the amount of work Jake did.  I think he took four full days of scouting out the route in rental cars, since it was brand new this year, to check signage and land marks and so on.  He really put a lot of effort into getting the new route and new cuesheet ready to go, and it was really important to him that it go well.  So I'm also really glad that so many people went out and enjoyed the ride, despite the weather! 
I didn't have time to pre-ride it, but I'm definitely going to go out and ride the route myself... hopefully with nicer weather, and I'll be sure to bring back lots of photos of what y'all would have seen had there not been so many rain drops in the way.  :)

Emily



-----------------------------------
Dill Pickle
... gear for the extra mile

-----------------------------------



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