Snow job

Feh. Typical Bibleburg snow. Not enough to shovel, but too much to broom. And 13 degrees to boot, with a brisk wind out of the east. I note that it is 52 and partly sunny in Las Cruces, N.M. Yet I am here instead of there. I will never be smart.

A guy needs chile inside when it's chilly outside.
A guy needs chile inside when it's chilly outside.

I’m putting off the ride to nowhere as long as possible. Didn’t I burn some calories shifting snow from here to there? Sure I did. Counts as exercise, I don’t care what anyone says. And anyway, we broke fast with a revoltingly healthy meal of oatmeal, toast and orange juice, largely because we are out of eggs, sausage and potatoes. Stick that in your heart-rate monitor. Pfffbbblllpphhh.

Speaking of heart-healthy food and New Mexico, if I were there, I wouldn’t have had to spend too many blisteringly cold minutes just now roasting up some green chile on the back deck. I could’ve simply bundled up and toddled on down to Tia Sophia, The Shed or La Choza to knock back a couple or six warming tequilas while waiting for someone else to do the heavy lifting, chile-wise. Instead, the neighbors are treated to the all-too-familiar sight of the block whacko, clad like Peary at the Pole, frantically flipping chiles on the gas grill in a wind chill of minus-3 so he can whip up some chicken enchiladas in green chile sauce to treat his pneumonia.

Things that suck: a continuing series

Trainers are to cycling as wanking is to sex.
Trainers are to cycling as wanking is to sex.

The stationary trainer: Cycling without all that annoying fun stuff. I unfolded the Cateye and attached a bike this afternoon after catching a glimpse of tomorrow’s forecast, which calls for a chance of snow, wind and a high of 19 degrees. Not exactly a day at the beach.

But then I’m not exactly Old Whatsisface, either. Johan Bruyneel would not pronounce me to be in better shape than I was three years ago, not even for money. Herself would fall down in a giggling fit just trying to squeak the words out.

So sometime tomorrow, unless the weatherman is wildly off base, I will take another of those refreshing rides to nowhere, facing a fan, in the basement.

Mike Creed just tweaked me on Facebook, saying, “Get on down to Silver City. 50s and 60’s next week.” But there are mountains in them thar hills, if I recall correctly from my previous life as a New Mexican, and if there’s anything a 54-year-old fat bastard hates more than cold, it’s climbing. I’d look and sound like a Lycra-wrapped step van full of live pigs, and Christo would probably base his next daffy art project on me.

Two for two

Mia Sopaipilla has resolved to quit decking the holiday ornaments, in no small measure because we're putting them away.
Mia Sopaipilla has resolved to quit decking the holiday ornaments, in no small measure because we're putting them away.

It’s the first Friday of the New Year, and while I ordinarily loathe and despise resolutions (mostly because I can’t keep them), I’m going to try very, very hard in 2009 to (a) ride the bike more, and (2) write more online columns for VeloNews.com.

So far, so good. I rode yesterday and today, and banged out a New Year’s Dog Breath for the VeloSnoozers. You needn’t bother looking it up, unless you’re interested in seeing how a blog post (yesterday’s) metastasizes into a column. No, I take that back. We need the eyeballs. Click on over there straight away and then report back to me.

(Intermission)

Back so soon? Damn, that one must’ve really sucked. Of course, you’d already seen most of the good bits in the trailer, but still, damn. Whaddaya want for free? Next time you’re in the neighborhood, buy some Fat Guy jerseys, f’chrissakes. Scotch isn’t getting any cheaper, y’know.

Hot ‘cross buns

The fabled Brown Stripe of Cyclo-cross, up the bag and onto the booty.
The fabled Brown Stripe of Cyclo-cross, up the bag and onto the booty.

New Year’s Day. Late arising for some reason. Check the trash for dead soldiers. Christ, it looks like the Battle of Verdun in there. Thank God we had the good sense to leave the sparkling wine corked.

I am in the midst of preparing a massive American breakfast when Dr. Schenkenstein phones to propose cycling somewhere, on ‘cross bikes, within the hour. We can do that. We don’t even need a reason, though breaking fast with a skillet full of eggs, peppers, potatoes and ham after an evening’s debauchery certainly provides one.

Off we roll, me feeling mildly retarded and wildly overdressed. The computer said 47 but those things lie. It’s the usual route, north on the bike path into the Air Force Academy and back, and the warmish weather has yet to completely melt several sheets of ice coating this and that, which makes for some nervous moments, particularly on descents.

My neural network being slightly jangled, I actually walk one of these treacherous pitches, which proves even sketchier than trying to ride it. But I figure I’ll be much slower and closer to the ground if I spaz out, and thus won’t T-bone some iPlodder focused on his playlist in the blind corner at mid-descent.

The rest of the ride unfolds without incident, and once we are into the academy ice gives way to mud and damp sand. Now I have two ‘cross bikes in dire need of cleaning. Happily, I have three more in the rotation before it’s off to the car wash with a bucket, rags and brushes, pockets packed with quarters.