In the middle of the journey of my life, I am--as always--a woman on a bike. Although I do not know where this road will lead, the way is not lost, for I have arrived here. And I am on my bicycle, again.
Friday's weather was practically the definition of "dreary": at any given moment, we had any given combination of snow, rain and sleet combined with winds that gusted, at time, to 90 KPH. While the stuff stopped falling out of the sky Saturday morning, a ceiling of thick clouds obscured the sun--at least, for most of the day. And it was still pretty windy. No matter: Bill and I went for a ride. We were exulting in our good fortune when we encountered a "souvenir" of the previous day's weather:
I'd heard that trees fell and power lines snapped. Still, it's a surprise when you find them right in the middle of your route. It wasn't really a surprise that the tree fell: We could see the decay near its base. Also, it was pretty easy to see that the tree needed more room for its roots to spread and deepen. I guess that when that tree was planted--100 years ago?--no one expected it to grow so tall--or for concrete to be poured over its base. One car looked totaled. The others struck by the trees looked repairable. Fortunately, neither Bill nor I had bikes in the path of its fall!
I rode my Trek because I expected to encounter more debris, mud and other detritus of the storm than I did. Bill rode the rattiest of the three (!) early '70's Schwinn Sports Tourers he owns.
We stared riding just after noon and made a longer-than-expected lunch stop. So, by the time we got to the bridge from Far Rockaway to Atlantic Beach, on the south shore of Nassau County, it was already late in the day.
The South Shore of Long Island is one of the few places on the East Coast where you can look west and see the sun set on the ocean, the way you would in, say, Laguna Beach. And we spent much of the rest of our ride headed into the sunset, from Atlantic Beach to Sheepshead Bay on Brooklyn's South Shore.
From the path between Jacob Riis Park and Fort Tilden, we saw the Manhattan skyline--about 30 kilometers away, as the crow flies--ablaze. Of course, in New York it's hard not to associate blazing buildings with 9/11--especially since a number of firefighters who died that day lived in Rockaway Beach and Belle Harbor, two South Shore communities we traversed on our ride. But I had to remind myself that those skyscrapers were glowing in the reflection of the sunset, not burning in the aftermath of a disaster.
The sun, hidden most of the day, ended the day by playing peek-a-boo with the clouds before disappearing into the sea.
As our ride ended, it had one thing in common with The French Connection: a ride under the New Utrecht Avenue elevated subway. Well, all right, our time under it wasn't nearly as long or dramatic.
I certainly hope the household is "stationary." I wouldn't want to live in something that didn't stay in place, at least while I'm inside it. And I certainly wouldn't allow whoever painted that awning the use of my stationery until he or she learned how to spell. Or maybe I wouldn't be so picky. After all, I was still basking in the glow of that sunset we prolonged by riding into it. N.B.: Bill took all of the photos in this post.
Until the other day, June had been rather gloomy: mostly gray, chilly and damp. I did a little bit of riding, mostly for some other purpose or another. The other day, however, seemed like a "breakout" day. And Arielle, my Mercian Audax, knew it:
I had ridden her a bit this year, but Friday was her first long ride: up to Connecticut, where she frolicked in the fauna and took me up and down hills. I somehow managed to make wrong turns wherever I could (Perhaps I could blame her: I think she was feeling as adventurous as I was) and entered Connecticut by way of "The Ridge" on the north side of Greenwich. That is where you find all of those houses and horse farms you see in Architectural Digest and Vanity Fair spreads. None of the climbs are long, but a few are steeper than you expect if you're not familiar with the area. And they are endless: No matter which way you turn, you have to go up a hill. And I was riding into the wind most of the way up from my place.
One nice thing about all of that climbing is that when I got to downtown Greenwich and did a little people-watching at the Veterans Memorial (where Arielle ensconsed herself among the flowers), the pear I brought with me tasted exceptionally sweet, and the bottle of water I bought (something Italian, with essences of cherry and dragonfruit) felt like a spring coursing through my body. However, if I thought I'd taken all the wrong turns I was going to take that day, I was wrong. Instead of turning on to Glenville Road, I turned on to Lake Drive, where I saw the back end of all of those estates I saw from the front on my way in, and the front of all of the places I saw from the rear earlier in the day. Or so it seemed. Buclolic it is. And hilly. When I came to an intersection that kind of-sort of looked familiar, I turned in the direction I thought was home. Instead, I found myself climbing more hills an by the time I finally realized where I was, I saw that I'd pedaled about the same distance (75 km) from the Ridge to my place--but in the opposite direction. I was just north of Mount Kisco. So I rode until I came to railroad tracks and followed them until I ran out of sunscreen. By then, I think I'd gotten more sunlight than I'd seen all month! When I find myself tiring out on such sunny day, it usually is a result of the sun. Then I hopped a train from Hawthorne back to Grand Central, without guilt: After all I'd ridden about 110 miles (170 km), against hills and wind. That seemed to whet Arielle's appetite--and mine. So, yesterday, we took a "recovery" ride--120 mostly flat kilometers to Point Lookout, with a bit of a ramble along the South Shore.
I got more sun. And Arielle got to work on her tan.
So shouted a random stranger as I rode by. I simply smiled and winked, though I doubt he saw the latter under my shades. If I had stopped to talk to him, I might've said something like "This weather brings out my natural glow." Of course, he wouldn't have known that I might not have a natural glow. But that'll be our little secret, dear reader.
Anyway, I just had to get out for a ride. December and May are for college instructors what March and April are for tax accountants. I feel like I'm in that scene from Fantasia in which the brooms multiply. The difference is, of course, is that instead of brooms, the papers are reproducing themselves everywhere I turn. And, although I'm always learning something new (or so I hope), I am not an apprentice. At least, I'm not considered one. Back to the ride: The gentleman who wondered how I could ride in the cold (about -2C or 28F, which is the coldest it's been so far this season) was walking his dog along a block of houses that are more expensive than they seem on the South Shore of Long Island. I was, again, riding to Point Lookout on a day when about the only people walking along those streets or on the beaches were accompanied by dogs, mostly big ones.
I guess today seems polar to some people because we've had a mild fall: In fact, I don't think the temperature fell below 5C (40F) before this week. Interestingly, we had strong winds, sometimes as much as 80KPH (50 MPH) the other day and last weekend. But today's air was still, which may be the reason why the weather didn't seem cold to me.
It was also probably the reason why, without any unusual effort, I kept a good pace along the flat route. Interestingly, the only climbs I encounter are near the beginning and near the end of my ride. Neither are long, but both are fairly steep, or seem so as they seem to erupt from the flat stretches that precede them.
The funny thing about today's ride--which left me invigorated and refreshed after 105 kilometers--was that, as I rode, I saw winter more than I felt it. I mean, it was a bit colder than it's been and I was wearing more layers than I wore, say, a couple of weeks ago. And I could feel the chill on my face. But, in spite of the fact that I haven't ridden much during the past couple of weeks, I wasn't feeling the cold or even a nip in the rest of my body and I felt supple, in spite of how little I've ridden during the past couple of weeks.
The signs of the coming season were in the clouds, in the light of this day, and in the graying waves that receded into the horizon that offered a hint of a distant sunset.
I love riding under this sky, with the first hint of winter, because they are somehow intimate to me in ways that the summer light--as much as I love that, too--is not. Perhaps it has to do with the fact that so few people are out on a day like this, and those who are--by choice--appreciate the austere beauty of such a day.
The snow that was forecast has begun to fall. It won't last, and it won't accumulate, at least not in the Five Boroughs. But the northern suburbs of Westchester and Rockland Counties and Connecticut might get a layer of frosting on the cake while we get a dusting, perhaps a coating.
Tosca, my Mercian fixed gear, does not have a heater, in response to the man's question. And I'm glad she doesn't. I wonder, though, whether this guy (or girl) has a heater: