Showing posts with label 2020. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2020. Show all posts

30 December 2020

Just a beautiful day on the bicycle


I'm back. Back on the bike. Back into the countryside! 

More than three months since my collarbone break, on December 24 my Japanese orthopedist declared the break "80% healed". It took long enough -- I opted for the no surgery option, and some overuse too soon doubtless is behind the delay, in addition to my "advanced" upper 50's age. But 80% was good enough for me to transition from riding on the trainer indoors and running a few errands in town to ... riding the Rapha Festive 500! 

And, I thought, if I can do the #Festive500, I should be ready for some Randonneurs-Tokyo 200km brevets in January. I will do at least one and, I hope, two.

I am looking forward to 2021 as a year of renewal, of healing, of freedom to ride -- to go when and where I want on the bicycle in this cycling paradise of a country, and even maybe, eventually, elsewhere in the world. I can almost taste it, I am so full of anticipation. 

On the 24th, I rode the trainer in the morning, then hopped on my bike for my Christmas Eve visit to the orthopedist at Keio Univ Hospital in Shinanomachi. After getting his "80%" report, I pottered around Tokyo and stretched my return home, then rode out to dinner and back for a mix of over 75kms virtual/real cycling on the day 1 of the Festive 500. The next day I enjoyed a short 40+km Christmas morning spin with Nils, then on the 26th a slightly longer 70km ride with Jerome, then on the 27th 77kms with Jerome and Peter Y. accompanying them on the early stages of their ride to Yamanakako on the east side of Mt. Fuji -- a 200km plus round trip for them. On the 28th I did more shorter rides in town.  So with 3 days to go, I had logged 325kms toward the Festive 500.

The forecast for the 29th was beautiful -- the low temperature around 4C, high around 12-13C, with mostly clear sky. This would be the day for a big ride -- long slow winter distance, enjoying the countryside that I missed so much.

Only last week my wife had pointed out some "susuki" -- aka "Chinese silvergrass" -- the tall grasses that turn straw-colored in the autumn, with little tufts that reflect the sunlight. Near Tokyo, susuki usually grows in abandoned fields, or as a large weed beside highways. It does not seem highly valued. But I hold a vision in my head of rides in late autumn or early winter along Route 76 in the hills west of Tokyo, on a climb between Lake Sagami and Doshi Michi. If you push it hard on a training ride, these hills are where you start to get tired, and a perfect place for a quick stop to take a sip of water or a bite of trail mix, and snap a photo. When I think of susuki, I think of that stretch of road. But I had not been there in winter in at least five years.

Nils was up for a full day ride; Jerome for a longer half day. So we met at Futako Tamagawa at 7AM and headed up river, out of town. We stopped for coffee (and breakfast) early, then continued on, over "hospital hill" (also known as the climb to Renkoji), then headed out Yaen Kaido. Jerome had a report that Peter Y. was riding with some other friends, already over Yaen Pass and heading for the north side of Lake Tsukui. So we also went over Yaen Pass, then zig-zagged through Minami Hachioji and eventually to the Shiroyama area just before Lake Tsukui, where we had a second rest stop. This zig zag route through the suburban hills also was something I had not done in ages. It is a slower way out of town than some others, so I had crossed it off my list of regular routes long ago, but the road is wide and traffic volume relatively low. This was the prelude. Now the main act.

Nakazawa, Midori-ku


Lake Tsukui from the North shore hillside

The day was beautiful as we climbed past the village and winter vegetable fields of Nakazawa, Midori-ku/Sagamihara-shi, on the northeastern side of Lake Tsukui. Then we took the always lovely Mii-Sagamiko route further along the slope on the North side of the lake. We took the (closed to cars) forest road and passed Peter and his two companions heading the other direction, en route to a coffee appointment with new friends who live in a distinctive, fish-out-of-water Spanish-style house on the North Shore we jokingly refer to as the "Colombian drug lord house", or maybe the "Casa de Pablo Escobar".

Pink fallen leaves -- like an imaginary land -- the closed Tsukui forest road.

Looking west, still North side of Tsukui

Jerome and Nils


We then swooped down the hill to cross the narrow suspension bridge over the lake that brought us back to Matano and Mikage on the other side. This is a regular route -- I've taken photos of the slope we just rode along in nearly every month of the year.
Me on the bridge

We rode along there.

I was feeling good, never pushing, not yet fatigued, and enjoying the freedom of being on the bike, finally getting out to the countryside, with good relaxed company, regular riding buddies. 

The red chili pepper Asian food store on Rte 517.

We headed further west on National Rte 412, then Nils and I turned left onto local Rte 517, a side road through a village then a forest and on to first shown to Laurent by his cycling (and work) mentor Charles, then passed on to the rest of us. We took Route 517 over several steep "bumps" and eventually joined Route 76 at Fujino. A left turn and we were soon on the climb to ... my susuki fields. There they were, the grasses glowing in the weak winter sun, as they had in years past.

My susuki




We were down the other side of the slope quickly and to Doshi Dam with its jade colored waters, then another climb up (with a left turn off of Rte 76 for the short connector back to Doshi Michi, National Rte 413, the planned climb for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics Road Race -- signs marking the route along the roadside looking a bit less than fresh, but they should make it through the winter and to next summer. The view back down the valley was spectacular.

Doshi Dam




Looking back toward town down lower Doshi Michi

Heading back in Doshi Michi is always fast and joyful -- plenty of twists and turns, a few dips followed by short uphills one can power through with 10-20 pedal strokes. But this day we had enough of a headwind to slow us down and make us work a bit. We decided to stop for a real lunch at Zebra Coffee and Croissant after we got back to Lake Tsukui. 
Zebra -- full of socially distanced cyclists!
(Many bring their bikes inside here.)

A massive "Zebra gratin" for lunch.

Getting back on the bike, I felt as if I had already done two rides, the morning one with Jerome, then the scenic mid-day ride, and now we started our third--the trip back into town. It was uneventful, our pace quickened now that we were on lower, flatter ground and had left most of the headwind behind. We made decent time and decided to go all the way to the mouth of the Tamagawa, or at least to the entrance to Haneda Airport, to add a few more kilometers. By now, late afternoon, the sun was low and the paths along the river full of runners and walkers. The runners all seemed to be wearing harnesses with water bottles on each side ... maybe training for a trail running or longer distance event? It's definitely Tokyo Marathon training season. 

Nearing Kawasaki along the Tamagawa

The light of the fading day was soft and lovely, as we reached the Torii outside of Haneda. Nils headed back up river toward his home, while I headed along the Bay toward mine. In the end, a ride of 165 kms, or just over 100 miles.  The Strava track is here

At Haneda Airport


One of the canals of Shinagawa Ward 

This year has challenged the world. Many have lost much. But there is hope. This ride was a perfect but understated way to transition toward the hope of a new year. It was such a good ride, I decided it would be my last of the year. So on the 30th I just got on my trainer and "rode" the final few kms of the Festive 500 indoors. I did not want to dilute the memory of my susuki, not yet.


25 September 2020

Welcome Back

Jerome rides toward the pot of gold ... somewhere around Komae-shi

Dear Readers

Please accept my apologies for not maintaining the blog well in 2020. 

2020 has been a bit of a different year, to say the least, for many of us.

Most directly, I have been busy with non-bicycle-related life and work. Yes, there is such a thing. 

I got married, though due to the pandemic we have not yet had an actual wedding celebration, and we still don't know how or when we will be able to celebrate.  We were making lots of plans, all of which have been put in abeyance for a year or two due to the pandemic.

I took on a new part-time gig on the side, though I have not yet put much time into it, due to the pandemic. And despite the time savings from less travel, and fewer academic conferences, it has been a pretty busy period as a law professor, teaching new classes using new methods (online), and with a bigger entering class in our LLM program this Fall than ever before.


Peter W. at Shomaru Pass on a glorious day

The Tokyo Cranks at Lake Shiroyama

Nenogongen -- praying for strong leg since 911A.D.!

So most of my rides I have just posted on Strava with photos – often many photos – and short introductions. That seems to work better than a hurried blog post. And photos plus a GPS track give a lot of help to any would-be riders who take the trouble to look, especially given how good the photos are with an iPhone 11 pro compared to the small pocket digicam when this blog started back in 2007. If you are on Strava you can see plenty of rides (no paid account required for that).

For a while in recent years, I was posting ride-related updates on Facebook. I still do put some photos there, many Audax riders use FB … but FB does not create a long-lasting record since only Facebook’s AI can find posts from a few years ago, when the AI reminds me of a “memory” to try and keep me engaged on the site long enough to see a few more ads. I hope that someday we can all get off Facebook, before Zuckerberg gets all the money and we get a civil war. (Yes, I do note the irony of writing this on a Google-owned platform. Wouldn't it be great if Facebook, Google or Amazon would buy Strava?)

Jerome and David at Wada Pass -- we form the traditional pose

John K. at Matsuhime Pass.  I saw a bear, a way up there, a way up there I saw a bear.

Kai Saruhashi, one of Japan's "three unique bridges"

I meet expat cyclists in the Tokyo area from time-to-time who tell me they really appreciate the blog – that it helped them a lot when they started riding in the area. So this blog is not going anywhere. The "routes out of town" and "20+ favorite rides" pages are still very popular resources, as are the posts on dynamo hubs, some other equipment reviews, and a few of the trip reports.

Of course, the pandemic, and Japan’s “state of emergency declaration” (remember to call it “the Declaration”, not “the Emergency”) with its soft lockdown has affected cycling as well. No activities have been unaffected. For many months we had no overnight cycling trips, no organized events, not even minimally supported Audax rides. I did not hang up my cycling shoes, but instead took only rides with one or a couple others, and minimal stops. It was a great way to get in shape and stay sane this Spring as I could get up early and take maybe 3 x 3 hour morning rides each week, with minimal traffic. 

One might argue that my rides to neighboring prefectures, even day trips (県を跨ぐ移動), violated the “request” for "self-restraint" of the emergency declaration. Well, Tokyo is all a single metro area, even if comprised of several prefectures. Even a Costco run requires leaving Tokyo and entering Kanagawa Prefecture. So I don't take that seriously.

But it was definitely not good form to be too public about going on rides, nor take longer multi-day rides, during the Declaration. My university had a well-publicized incident involving a big end of year party for medical residents at the hospital, where the party turned into a cluster of Covid-19 infections and ALL the residents needed to isolate for two weeks. What a disaster from a healthcare perspective when the healthcare system is under stress and ALL the residents are out in quarantine! And I'm no spring chicken, and from my gender and blood type I know that even if I am athletic and healthy, I am probably higher than average risk for a middle-aged man were I to contract Covid-19. So I did not want to take significant risks with the coronavirus. Still, riding outside in Spring weather seemed about as low-risk as I could imagine.

Months later, I enjoyed some really nice rides in Nagano while we were out there during the summer, rented a place for a month or so in Sanadamachi -- on a hill above Ueda. I got in lots of quick morning 2-hour workouts riding up to Torii Pass or Sugadaira Kogen. But none of my rides was really long. Nothing over 100km, nor over 2500m elevation gain. No “three pass” days. And still no Audax.

On the Venus Line in the clouds

At Sugadaira Kogen with the "sardine clouds"

I am Sanada, the fierce warrier!

Rice near harvest in Sanadamachi

Masks on! At Yunomaru Heights

Slow moving Jerome, on the way to Yunomaru


Audax has restarted, from September, but I was not checking the club websites regularly, I did not sign up, and, for reasons that will become apparent later in another post I want to do in the next day, I will not likely get in any Audax rides before the new Audax year starts in November/December.
Ayu cycles Miura Peninsula

On the road to JuFuku no Yu hotspring in early September


14 February 2020

Winter Miura

I finally made my annual winter ride on the Miura Peninsula awhile back. Took the train to Yokosuka Chuo and back from Zushi and just did the loop around the bottom of the peninsula this time, with Peter W.  We had lovely weather and a nice, not too tough ride at a relaxed pace. I will let the photos do the talking.