Introduction

Allo, hello, tere,

Some old lines/puns: Pierre qui roule, rock and roll, the rolling stone (gathers no dust).

Who: Pierre, Ottawa (ON)

What: Cross Canada travel.

When: After a few days rest in Tofino, British Columbia at the beginning of May, 2008, hit the road around the 4th. The 1st time-based goal is to arrive in Ottawa in mid June, race in a 24-hour mountain bike competition, and head back on the road a few days later. Finish the trip in St. John's, Newfoundland, at the end of July, 2008, before returning home to Ottawa to start being an adult again.

Where: Canada, West to East, via Toronto, Ontario. Detours: Val Gagné and Manitoulin Island (ON), Gaspé region (QC), and Cape Breton (NS).

Why: Visit this beautiful (and fairly big) nation of ours. See family and friends. Taste the cuisine of different parts of the country and enjoy the various beers and wine along the way. Experience anything the villages and cities along the way have to showcase. Lose 50 pounds and be buff.

How: By bicycle (her nickname: Dzie, pronounced D-Zie).

Extras: According to mapquest, a drive from tip to tip (via Toronto) would be 7710 km (85 hours of driving, 2 ferries). A flight would only be 5400 km (9 hours flight time, with switching planes 2 times).

* I do occasionally feel I am following the footsteps of a few great ones (whom I've also had the honour of riding with), who have done this trip in the past - Al, and especially Tanya. I do hope that I can bring in some new pics, new stories, and not rehash stuff that those amazing folks have done before me.

** I imagine I'll be a bit lonely at times throughout the trip, where I highly request and encourage comments from you guys. It'll be my way of having some conversations with you. I'll try to update the blog every few days.

Disclaimer: Most of you guys know me. In my posts, there will probably be a mixture of bizarre stories, silly jokes (like the weight-losing bit a few instances before), some references to music lyrics and movie lines. I will do my best to entertain, but sometimes, I might miss the mark on being funny or entertaining (hopefully not though).

Posting messages: Readers with a gmail/blogger account - you know what to do. Readers who do not: post a comment as anonymous (but put your name at the bottom of the comment please). The occasional personal messages can be sent to pierre.l.perron@gmail.com

Ciao,
p2

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Day 16 - Medecine Hat (AB) to Swift Current (SK)


Medecine Hat (AB) to Swift Current (SK)
229 km, over 10 hours
Sunny (mostly)
WINDY – 40 km/hr with gusts of 50 km/h

Picture link updated, click on the title of this entry to view.

What is the story of the day. The minor one is that Saskatchewan is not flat. I spent a lot of time in the granny gear at the beginning of Saskatchewan. The second story is the wind, the relentless and unforgiving wind.

But, other stories for now. Last night, after doing my homework (blog and pictures), I visited the couple who invited me to join them. They are from Windsor, heading out West for the guy to live there, and she returns. Nice folks. I had 3 beers with them, socialized by the fire, then head to bed.

The morning, the usual – would like to stay in bed (or in a bed) a little longer. But, no rest – I'll get plenty of rest on the bike today (just sitting on my bum). The plan: Swift Current, estimated 230 km, so 8-8.5 hours. I hoped to get an early start as I would change time zone as soon as I cross the provincial border.

Start time was decent (9 am), but I spent some time at the World's tallest teepee in Medecine Hat. After that, frapper la route.

The wind seemed strong today, but manageable. It was mainly a cross-wind, with a bit of headwind heading towards the border of Sask/AB, but with the road heading a bit North, I would expect a crosswind with the bit of tailwind. Hmmmm..

Crossing the border, this RV was backed all the way into the Welcome to Saskatchewan sign. It looked like a bicycle touring RV for a fundraiser of some sort. I was a bit annoyed and disappointed that I couldn't get a nice clean picture of the sign. I almost missed it too (damn RV).

Even though I am in a different time zone, the time hasn't changed (same as Alberta time). Only in the winter it changes. So, on the other side of Manitoba, I'll lose 2 hours, not one.

Hills – who said Saskatchewan is flat? I'd like to take them biking these parts.

Ran into a group of 4 cyclists who are touring Canada as well. They are based out of Ottawa, and it's a fundraiser for them. I believe it is www.typicallycanadian.com, and the folks are Alex, Kyle, Andrew and Steve. I saw them up ahead while biking at one point, and I was able to catch up sooner when one of them had a flat. They weren't heading much further for the day. It was their RV (support crew) that was blocking that provincial sign.

What was suppose to be a 8-8.5 hr day in the saddle turned out to be a lot more. The expected sidewind with a little bit of tailwind, well, didn't exactly happen. It went back and forth from a bit of tail wind to a bit of head wind. But, around 55 km left, the wind changed direction, and intensity. It became a bit aggressive, and relentless. I was being pushed around a lot. I felt like a beginner tri-geek (triathlon) who is learning how to ride with aerobars: all over the place. The wind was mainly a crosswind with becoming increasingly a dominant headwind. The last 10 km were completely headwind. I remember going down a hill, head down, pedalling, and able to hover around 15-16 km/h. For the first hour, I just put my head down and pedaled (having a speed of maybe 20 km/h). After that hour, the curse words were coming out (not softly either). I grunted for another hour, then gave up for the last hour – I just put in my time and ride into town.

Food – At lunch, I had a Saskatoon Berry pie. They are berries from that area, tasting sweet, similar to blueberries and cherries. They are red, with the size of a blueberry. Very good. I had it with Hokey Pokey ice cream – toffee and chocolate chunks with vanilla ice cream. It's like the Mirage candy bars we have. At supper, as I couldn't find a Subway or something similar (and I didn't want to bike further into that wind), I ate at Huskies. The deal – a double burger with cheese and the works, plus an egg in there. Turned out alright.

I am at a campsite, where it was quite fun and interesting setting up the tent in this wind. At the moment, it is nuts outside. I have weights at all corners, as the pegs would just rip out. During the set-up, I could just picture the tent flying away, like in the movie The Motorcycle Diaries. Have I talked about how great of a flick that is? If so, sorry.

I checked out the temperature (well, honestly, doesn't matter for temperature) but mainly the wind for tomorrow. It looks like it is settling down – only 30 damn km/hr, from the East. Guess what? I am heading East. Argh. I might have to break up my day. I have a feeling it'll be a grunt day. I dont know where I'll end up. I was hoping (best case scenario) to end up in Regina (250 km), but I hope that I can reach Moose Jaw (170 km) then do a shorter day into Regina. With the later option, I am still ahead a day, but I was hoping to be ahead 2 days to save things for a rainy day (have lighter days here and there). Oh well.

Alright, I will head to bed in a little bit, and I hope the tent is still around when I wake up tomorrow.

Cheers,

p2

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

"After that hour, the curse words were coming out (not softly either)... "
~ ~ ~
I like reading stuf that I can related with! That wind stuff can sure "break" a person.

Back to back 2xMagic's, well done on your 3rd accomplished cycling goal. Many Congrats since you did it with that friggen' wind. And, you're planning to do 250k the following day? You're more machine that man! Is your secret... Ale?

Good luck buddy,

MT

Hannah said...

the berry pie sounds super yummy!

Anonymous said...

Tere väsinud ja tuulest räsitud,

Ma väga vabandan selle neetud tuule eest - see töesti ei ole mina.
Mulle väga meeldiks kui see pöörduks taganttuuleks, mis tooks sinu kiiremini tagasi Ottawasse.
:-)

Kalli-musi

Boo said...

I would have given up! But that's me and not you. Way to go P2!

Hope the wind eases off a bit so you can enjoy the ride.

Anonymous said...

Hey Bonhomme

Sounds like a lot of hard work but judging by your pics, it's worth it. You are doing very well, we are all proud of your accomplishments. Wish I could make your homecoming party.

d

Anonymous said...

wow pierre t es vraiment une machine
aligner plus de 600 km en trois jours de façon saine et naturelle, bravo.

je voulais t annoncer une bonne nouvelle, j ai une job comme physio a l hopital de sherbrooke.
j ai commencé mardi et c pas mal le fun

continu mec

Anonymous said...

tank