Saturday, October 29, 2016
Goals and Principles
There are goals and there are principles. Sometimes goals and principles do not always align. It is great to set goals, train or prepare accordingly, and finally execute. If a goal however gets in the way of your core principles, it might be time to revaluate your goal.
For a simple goal of running a marathon, there might be some sacrifices made where work is neglected or a story time is missed, to get that extra training run. However if a goal is so overblown or committed that it has a material impact on your life or relationships, it might be wise to reevaluate where you are heading.
Myself, Jeff and Paul had a goal of riding from Pittsburgh to DC to Baltimore. While we were behind our schedule due to rain and some other technicalities, everyone was mentally and physically prepared to finish the journey. Unfortunately, Paul encountered a stick hidden by leaves on the trail. Okay a branch. Well-it was more like a club. Said club popped itself into the front spokes, fender, and fork, which caused him to sail head and then shoulder into the ground. Jeff, drafting behind, soon ran over him and crashed as well. Fortunately for me, my light was disconnected and had to stay further away. I had enough time to brake.
Paul took a beating. He couldn't continue. [Elaborations to follow] We called his wife to pick him up. At that point, Jeff and I had to make a decision. Continue down to DC or ride back with Paul. We both agreed to finishing our journey. When Paul's wife came to pick him up, Jeff and I went back with him.
The goal of the trip was to make it down to DC and then up to Baltimore. But something unexpected happened. The moment one of our teammates went down, we knew the true journey was in the friendship and bonds that occurred over the prior 270 miles. Our goal was no longer relevant-seeing your friends safely out was just the right thing to do. After all, this is just one of many other crazy rides we will be having with friends like Paul.
[A full recount of the trip will be following shortly]
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
First time Bike Packing-beginnings of an epic ride
Bike Packing? What on earth is that? I stumbled upon the concept of bike packing during some random Facebook sponsored content--pathlesspedaled. I love biking and I wanted to learn more about camping-why not do both?
The opportunity however never presented it self until this summer when my friend Jeff and I wanted to do some long training rides in preparation for his Shenandoah Mountain 100 race. Brainstorming around some long rides, we somehow threw out a Pittsburg to DC ride. I had heard people riding it, but I didn't know how far or what was involved in riding that journey. When I realized it was 335 miles, it was going to be an adventure for later. Not yet . . .
Later that summer we saw a few friends do a ride around the Chesapeake bay. It was a Double Century! Never heard that term used, but I knew I had to do one. Jeff and I launched it 3 weeks later on one of the hottest days of the year. Epic exhaustion from the heat, but epic time riding! I'll have to write about that experience later . . .
While Jeff and I really loved mountain biking, there is something about moving from point A to B and experiencing the journey. The Pittsburg to DC ride was brewing in my head. All trail, all riding, easy grade-why not? So I started entertaining the idea to other fools I knew. A number of them said they were interested. Until they heard my goals.
- Needs to be cheap. Okay, so this is a principal that runs throughout my entire core of living. This ruled out B&B's and other such fun stuff.
- Bike Camping. I wanted to test out what bike camping was like and if I could assemble the stuff to do it.
- Needs to be fast. While fast is relative, I did not want this to take 4-5 days. One guy mentioned he did it in 30 hours non stop. That sounded brutal and conflicted with objective #2. Day days sounded "reasonable".
- Having fun. Why else would I be doing this.
So let's see what happens . . .
Saturday, March 28, 2015
My morning oatmeal
I am cheap.
Well, more of a frugalist.
While I am not a complete disciple of Mr. Money Mustache, one interesting tid bit in his Spartan living is how he controls cost with food. He simply eats super cost effective products. While I still indulge my family with expensive high quality food products, I am also a fan of cost effective meals. A very big fan.
In college, I would often cook for myself some rice and stir fry the toughest, chewiest, piece of top round I could find? Why top round? For 3.49 a pound back then, it was one of the cheapest cuts of meat I could find. Was it tender? No. Was it tasty. You bet. Done.
A big fan of a large breakfast, I find myself wanting to 3 sunny side up eggs, bacon, and two pieces of toast with my mom's delicious strawberry jam. Of course, now that I have to drive to work, that luxury of enjoying a well cooked meal is gone due to time constraints.
So what do I do? I prepare a whole mess of oatmeal. Okay . . . so how is this noteworthy?
In the way I cook it.
Okay-let me explain.
I am a big fan of steel cut oat oatmeal after discovering it from my favorite celebrity chef, Alton Brown. It's less processed, nuttier, and heartier than regular rolled oats. The downside with steel cut oatmeal, is that it takes quite a bit of time to cook. 20-30 minutes if you boiling and stirring. One could cook it overnight in a slow cooker, but I find the results to be soft and mushy. I like texture in my oatmeal.
Experimenting one night, I boiled a pot of water, turned off the stove, threw in the steel cut oats, placed a lid on, and walked away. The darn thing boiled over with the residual heat and made a big mess on the stove.
So the next experiment I did the next few days was to let the pot cool for a few minutes before placing the lid. The next day, I had a properly textured oatmeal that simply need a quick reheat in the microwave.
With the exception of the reheating-I used the minimal amount of energy required to cook the oatmeal, since I allowed it to cook/simmer over night with the residual heat.
Brilliant right?
Let me know what you think.
Well, more of a frugalist.
While I am not a complete disciple of Mr. Money Mustache, one interesting tid bit in his Spartan living is how he controls cost with food. He simply eats super cost effective products. While I still indulge my family with expensive high quality food products, I am also a fan of cost effective meals. A very big fan.
In college, I would often cook for myself some rice and stir fry the toughest, chewiest, piece of top round I could find? Why top round? For 3.49 a pound back then, it was one of the cheapest cuts of meat I could find. Was it tender? No. Was it tasty. You bet. Done.
A big fan of a large breakfast, I find myself wanting to 3 sunny side up eggs, bacon, and two pieces of toast with my mom's delicious strawberry jam. Of course, now that I have to drive to work, that luxury of enjoying a well cooked meal is gone due to time constraints.
So what do I do? I prepare a whole mess of oatmeal. Okay . . . so how is this noteworthy?
In the way I cook it.
Okay-let me explain.
I am a big fan of steel cut oat oatmeal after discovering it from my favorite celebrity chef, Alton Brown. It's less processed, nuttier, and heartier than regular rolled oats. The downside with steel cut oatmeal, is that it takes quite a bit of time to cook. 20-30 minutes if you boiling and stirring. One could cook it overnight in a slow cooker, but I find the results to be soft and mushy. I like texture in my oatmeal.
Experimenting one night, I boiled a pot of water, turned off the stove, threw in the steel cut oats, placed a lid on, and walked away. The darn thing boiled over with the residual heat and made a big mess on the stove.
So the next experiment I did the next few days was to let the pot cool for a few minutes before placing the lid. The next day, I had a properly textured oatmeal that simply need a quick reheat in the microwave.
With the exception of the reheating-I used the minimal amount of energy required to cook the oatmeal, since I allowed it to cook/simmer over night with the residual heat.
Brilliant right?
Let me know what you think.
Monday, December 15, 2014
Saturday, December 6, 2014
In the news
While I wanted to blog about this "in real time", the fact of the matter is that I am a slacker. . .
Here is an article that was published this summer and featured in the Baltimore Sun.
My neighbor ratted me out to my local newspaper. Nice write up. Yeah!
Check out the article below:
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-county/catonsville/ph-ca-creative-resident-0625-20140708,0,453280.story
Here is an article that was published this summer and featured in the Baltimore Sun.
My neighbor ratted me out to my local newspaper. Nice write up. Yeah!
Check out the article below:
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/baltimore-county/catonsville/ph-ca-creative-resident-0625-20140708,0,453280.story
Who Should Buy This?
When I show people the mower-I either get an quizzical look as if I am crazy, or a dumbstruck "of course that makes sense" look. The funny observation is that my biking friends think its a great idea and their wives all want to actually buy one and mow the lawn.
So-who is this really for? Let's break this down into who it is for and who it is not for:
Who should buy one:
So-who is this really for? Let's break this down into who it is for and who it is not for:
Who should buy one:
- Someone who loves bikes
- Want's who wants a great workout while being productive
- Does not want to fuss with gas powered contraptions
- Wants the ability to mow the lawn at night without fear of disturbing the neighbors
- Wants to save money over the cost of gas powered contraptions
- Wants to level up on their biking skills and power
- Wants an absolutely manicured lawn
- Have grass higher than 6 inches
- Has a non flowy non bike friendly lawn
- Has a seriously rough or steep lawn
- Has no gumption
Saturday, November 22, 2014
The First Mow
Did it work? Check out the video . . .
Human powered designs from Jason M on Vimeo.
Suffice to say, I am very pleased with the results. Is this faster than push mowing the lawn? I have to get more accurate measurements to quantify this but here are a few observations:
Human powered designs from Jason M on Vimeo.
Suffice to say, I am very pleased with the results. Is this faster than push mowing the lawn? I have to get more accurate measurements to quantify this but here are a few observations:
- Against a pure head to head race of walking the mower and riding the mower, the riding will win.
- Riding the mower incurs more overlap, so it depends on your mowing route and biking accuracy to minimize overlap. Walking is much more precise in prevent overlap.
- On a hill, I was significantly faster biking. I could not get the leverage pushing the mower uphill. Biking up hill, was just like cranking up a normal hill on a bike-albeit with more drag.
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