Showing posts with label Awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Awards. Show all posts

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Texas

I snuck away last weekend for a ride in Texas. DanD, a friend I've known for years as a RUSA volunteer, hooked me up with a bike -- a 16 pounder named Marilyn Monroe -- and a place to stay. Both of those things, and a cheap plane ticket, made life easy.

I got down there Saturday afternoon, grabbed a quick Mexican lunch, then found Dan's house and let myself in. No surprise, he was out on a bike ride. I thumbed through an issue of the UMCA magazine as I waited, noting lots of familiar names in the Year Rounder list, including Dan and his friend Pam.

Dan arrived, all enthusiasm and smiles. And why not? He's got the best hair and moustache on the planet. A RUSA RBA, he is the motor and the motivator behind the Lone Star Randonneurs, a club that has earned a nationwide reputation for high mileage achievements. The celebrated K-Hounds manage 10,000 K of sanctioned events or more in a year. The math on that? About a 200K every week. Dan is the guy stoking that fire.

But back to the living room. The swap of a few pleasantries, lots of bike talk, and a bit of work on Marilyn, then Dan and I were off to the Dallas Fort Worth Stock Show, where Pam works. The guy at the parking lot gate knew Dan and chatted him up, proudly showed off a picture he'd taken -- the Space Shuttle riding piggyback on a jumbo jet. He gave Dan a copy.



We found Pam in the office, dressed in a stunning outfit, Texas all the way down to the cowboy boots. We walked through a sea of cowboy hats and cowboy shirts, through two long pavilions and emerged at the rodeo rink just in time to see the miniature horse and costume competition. This stagecoach won.



Walking back through the exhibits, here's a chair I would have purchased had I not been happily married.



And a tractor.



Off to another Mexican dinner with Dan's masters swim team, where I ate three baskets of chips and watched the coach hand out awards to the folks who swam 300, 400, 500 miles in 2008. Maybe it's not just bikers who get obsessive. I tipped the waitress generously. The meal made me happy.

We hit it to bed early Saturday night and got up early Sunday morning for an hour drive over to the start of the Populaire in Richardson. It began in front of the country's biggest bike shop, Richardson Bike Mart. The store is about two city blocks long. I think it has a stoplight in the middle aisle.



Lance used to ride for a team associated with the shop, and there is lots of Lance on the walls -- photos, jerseys, stuffed lions, Wheaties boxes.



I bought a Bento box with the Lone Star flag on the side to replace the one a squirrel ate.

About 30 riders milled about in the parking lot waiting for the start, including two who were there for their first brevet. Dan told me he uses the Populaire as a recruiting tool for new members. Show the newbies how much fun the crew is, and pretty soon they're in the club, racking up the miles with the best of them. Dan lives for those transformations.

But this day was not just for the new riders. Pam was supposed to be working another 12-hour day at the Stock Show, but here she was, dressed to the nines, complete with white gloves. She was carrying a big box. Now Dan was suspicious. Something was up.

Indeed. Pam gathered the crew around, did a slight diversion with small talk, then dived into a touching speech about Dan, describing him as the heart and soul of the local randonneuring effort. She talked about the hours he devoted to the sport, and his untiring efforts as a mentor, a coach, a booster. This was not an ordinary speech, and Dan was on edge.

Pam reached into the box she'd brought, took out the trophy. The American Randonneur Award, RUSA's highest honor, given each year to one individual "who has made a significant and outstanding contributions to randonneuring in the United States." This year, it was Dan's time. There was a hail of congratulations, several posed photos of Dan and Pam, a few group shots, and the inevitable joke that nobody had ever seen Dan speechless before. It was a beautiful moment.







Me and Marilyn rode in the back with Dan and several other riders for most of the day. We had a fine time out in the wind and the sun, doing what we love to do. Riding our bikes with friends.

When a guy in the parking lot shows off a shuttle picture, you know you're in Rocket Country. That was confirmed as we finished up, turning off of Apollo and on to Star Trek Road. Yes, Mission Accomplished.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

2007 Doublewide Awards: Best Dressed

Okay, we've got a clothes horse among us. It's Jerry, who took top honors in the "Best-Dressed" category with these two jerseys.


1) This Houston Rando shirt with the mad-eye dog.


2) This jersey from the Open Eye Cafe in Carrboro, one of our favorite coffee shops.

Runner-up goes to JoeRay for his Curious George T-Shirt. True, he didn't wear it on a ride, but he bought it because we saw a woman wearing one in Clarksville as we ate lunch during a Lake Loop.

Doublewide Awards: Best Posts of 2007

Here are the nominees for favorite posts of 07, in no particular order. The swimsuit competition is likely to considerably thin the field.

The Spartanburg 300K: A lesson in surviving mistakes and miscues…

Team N.D.D: Big Adventures don’t get much bigger than this….

Blackbeard’s Permanent: A great crew + a great route = a great night ride.

My PBP Bike: A look at the vintage ride that carried me and the day in 03...

Oasis: Not just a band… Discovering the joys of the roadside eatery…

The 600K Pre-Ride: Me and Branson ride right through the battlefields…

My Fling with Little Debbie: The snack cake steals my heart…

Bagging Mount Mitchell: Hours of hills and cold were a perfect warm-up for PBP… The garbage bag was a bonus...

Chicken Stories: The Siler City Express. A joy ride with two of my favorite riding buddies, Joe and Wes.

Fun things to do in Paris before PBP: Title gives it away.

2007 Doublewide Awards: Best Convenience Store Purchase

When you're packing for a brevet, it's often easy to overlook an item or 2. On last month's Gappity Gap, I forgot a light for reading my cuesheet in the dark. Not to worry. I made do with this lime green beauty, purchased for $2.99 at one of the ride controls.


2007 Awards List: Best Permanent

It was always great to get out with buddies for our monthly permanent. But one ride stands out: the Blackbeard Permanent in July. A great summer night, great friends and a great route made for a magic moment. Here's the write-up and a couple pictures.




2007 Awards List: Hardest Ride


In the Doublewide Awards, Hardest Ride, hands-down, goes to last month's Gappity Gap. While only a 200K, it was anything but short & sweet.

Here's the write-up, and a photo of Nick Bull and myself taken by Texas riding buddy Edward Robinson.

2007 Awards List: Best Q&As

As PBP neared last summer, I did e-mail Q&As with several of the Tar Heel riders who were heading to France. In looking back through my blog posts from this year, I was struck by the gems from these great riders. They’re worth another read. I only got half of the Tar Heel riders. I'll do better next time.

Here they are, in alphabetical order: Adrian, Branson, Byron, Cap'n, Caroline, Chet & Cyndy, Jerry, Keith, Paul, and Wes.

2007 Awards List: Best Video

The Doublewide Award series continues.

Best Video Honors in 2007 goes to...

Yo Adrian!
Who can forget the immortal video of Yo A, astride a microbike, reliving the glories of PBP? A classic!

2007 Awards List: Best Ride Poster


Big Adventures don’t get much bigger than the snow-capped ride of Flèche Team N.D.D. Talk about classy -- these guys even had their own poster. However, the team merchandise sales fell well short of predictions. The Team N.D.D. Store, saddled with an inventory of 3,500 unsold T-shirts, was forced into bankruptcy in October.

2007 Awards List: Best Photo

Here at the Trailer Park, it's time for our First Annual Doublewide Awards.

First up: the Best Picture of 2007. The envelope, please....



Laundry, by Capn John Ende, taken in July during Mountain Training Camp.

Ripe with past glories and future challenges, this picture was shot off the bike, between rides. Here, Capn Ende’s son Patrick helps hang the day’s road kill on the porch of the mountain house. A refreshing change from all those shots of smiling bike helmets.