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Thank you, Jim, for setting this up, being the host and taking care of details. I appreciate your efforts and your hospitality. Should be a great time. I look forward to seeing many Riv fans.
I expect to attend both the book talk and the overnight tour. If things work the way I hope, I will be riding my recently renovated Bridgestone MB-1, now known as Very Grant, seen in the attachment, all packed and ready. Judy, Judy Judy.
John
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John Blish
Minneapolis MN USA
Everybody who's pledged to attend this event is a true gentleman, except that one guy, but he knows who he is. Speaking of gentlemen, I'm not sure that we have any ladies planning to come. Not sure that I blame them for having other plans that conflict with riding around discussing the nuances of cantilever brake straddle hanger aesthetics for a couple days, but I hope you Riv-oriented females feel that you are welcome and encouraged to join the overnight ride, in full or in part. That goes for every demographic category, actually.
The two commonest concerns I've heard are addressed here:
1. You don't need to ride a Rivendell or even a bike that is somehow related to Riv. Your bike need not be steel or have a tweed mudflap or even fenders. There will be some "country" roads and some hills that are substantial by Midwest standards, so I recommend some low gears and a tire that's at least 32 mm. And you'll have to schlep your stuff, so you'll need adequate cargo capacity (unless you can get someone else to transport your gear for you). Aside from those suggestions, what brand or style of bike you ride doesn't matter. It matters more to have a versatile, can-do attitude and a sense of adventure.
2. Everybody I've talked to is concerned about "slowing everybody down". Good! We need slow people (like me) to keep things in the proper perspective. I figure that the fast guys and gals won't be into this, so it's probably a non-issue. We've got all day, so don't blow it by finishing early! Plan to take LOTS of pictures and to make frequent stops to regroup, chat, have snacks, occasionally address mechanical issues, etc. That said, you should be somewhat confident in your fitness to cover 50-60 somewhat hilly, mixed terrain miles in a day, on back-to-back days. If that's likely to be a hardship for you, please be sure to have some kind of emergency bail-out plan, just in case, but still feel free to join the ride.
Hard to believe this is just a few weeks away. It's going to be the highlight of the Summer, I expect!