"grerge" <csac> wrote: (clip)Then he seemed to realize the state he was in
and asked me to get him a Coke real quick. (clip)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
I believe your story, but I don't understand it. If he forgot his insulin,
his blood sugar would be high. Having a coke or candy bar is the treatment
for LOW blood sugar, which would be the result of an insulin overdose, or
missing a meal.
Kumen wrote:
> As I've mentioned here before, I plan to ride around 150 miles to
> family reunion this summer. This after eye surgery, being diabetic
and
> not knowing anyhone else interested in riding with me.
>
> So it looks like my ride, at this point, will be a solo ride. I'll
> either ride from Amarillo, TX or Borger, TX to Elk City, OK. It's
> about 120 miles from Borger and about 150 miles from Amarillo. The
> route from Borger is much more familiar to me than the route from
> Amarillo, since I grew up in Borger and spent a lot of time growing
up
> in Elk City. I'm riding a Giant Boulder in really good operating
> condition.
>
> The route from Borger would take me across the Panhandle through
> Skellytown, Pampa, Mobetie, Wheeler, Sweetwater OK, Elk City. It's
> hilly at the beginning, flattens out between Pampa and Wheeler and
then
> gets hilly again between Wheeler and Elk City. From Amarillo, I'd go
> to Panhandle, White Deer and into Pampa where the route would be the
> same from there. It's pretty flat from Amarillo to Pampa.
>
> Cities along my route are pretty far apart, anywhere from 15 to 45
> miles. I'd be in cell phnoe coverage all the time. The road is well
> traveled and there are houses along the way.
>
> So here are the questions:
>
> 1. Given the fact that I won't be able to ride again until 1 April on
> doctor's orders, how do I prepare for this ride?
>
> 2. What suggestions do you have for food, water, clothing, etc.?
>
> 3. What kind of mental attitude do I need?
>
> Y'all have given me good advice, a lot of smiles and some really good
> laughs since I discovered this newsgroup. I thank you.
>
> Ride well, my friends.
> Kumen
I rode from Austin to Albuquerque in June about 20 years ago. I spent a
couple of days on the panhandle fighting the prevailing southwest
winds, and that was the hardest part of that ride, both mentally and
physically.
Even though you seem to be favoring Borger as a starting point, you may
want to factor in the wind. I'm guessing that you would have a fairly
good chance at catching a consistent tail wind if you started from
Amarillo and a fairly good chance of catching some stiff cross winds if
you started from Borger.
Top off your water bottles or your camelback at every opportunity. If
you use water bottles instead of a camelback or similar system, put
thick clean sweat socks around your water bottle cages and keep those
socks wet. The evaporation from the socks will keep your water supply
pleasantly cool.
Whatever you wear, don't skimp on the sunscreen!
Riding in the panhandle in the summer can be mentally challenging.
There were a few stretches, lasting for several miles, when I on my
bicycle was literally the high point in the landscape. At times that
was exhilarating, and at times, depressing. There were no terrain
features, other vehicles, or manmade structures (other than some
4-strand barb-wire fences) in any direction. My only competitors for
Total Terrain Domination were a few head of grazing cattle.
You may have checked out the websites referenced in Claire Petersky's
sig line. If you haven't, I'd highly recommend [Only registered and activated users can see links. ]. There are some
techniques there for keeping things in perspective while you're in the
saddle.
I remember that the best part of my ride was the meadowlarks. they ride
shotgun, more or less, keeping you company in the hopes that your
wheels will kick up some grasshoppers or other goodies.
Kumen wrote:
> As I've mentioned here before, I plan to ride around 150 miles to
> family reunion this summer. This after eye surgery, being diabetic
and
> not knowing anyhone else interested in riding with me.
>
> So it looks like my ride, at this point, will be a solo ride. I'll
> either ride from Amarillo, TX or Borger, TX to Elk City, OK. It's
> about 120 miles from Borger and about 150 miles from Amarillo. The
> route from Borger is much more familiar to me than the route from
> Amarillo, since I grew up in Borger and spent a lot of time growing
up
> in Elk City. I'm riding a Giant Boulder in really good operating
> condition.
>
> The route from Borger would take me across the Panhandle through
> Skellytown, Pampa, Mobetie, Wheeler, Sweetwater OK, Elk City. It's
> hilly at the beginning, flattens out between Pampa and Wheeler and
then
> gets hilly again between Wheeler and Elk City. From Amarillo, I'd go
> to Panhandle, White Deer and into Pampa where the route would be the
> same from there. It's pretty flat from Amarillo to Pampa.
>
> Cities along my route are pretty far apart, anywhere from 15 to 45
> miles. I'd be in cell phnoe coverage all the time. The road is well
> traveled and there are houses along the way.
>
> So here are the questions:
>
> 1. Given the fact that I won't be able to ride again until 1 April on
> doctor's orders, how do I prepare for this ride?
>
> 2. What suggestions do you have for food, water, clothing, etc.?
>
> 3. What kind of mental attitude do I need?
>
> Y'all have given me good advice, a lot of smiles and some really good
> laughs since I discovered this newsgroup. I thank you.
>
> Ride well, my friends.
> Kumen
I rode from Austin to Albuquerque in June about 20 years ago. I spent a
couple of days on the panhandle fighting the prevailing southwest
winds, and that was the hardest part of that ride, both mentally and
physically.
Even though you seem to be favoring Borger as a starting point, you may
want to factor in the wind. I'm guessing that you would have a fairly
good chance at catching a consistent tail wind if you started from
Amarillo and a fairly good chance of catching some stiff cross winds if
you started from Borger.
Top off your water bottles or your camelback at every opportunity. If
you use water bottles instead of a camelback or similar system, put
thick clean sweat socks around your water bottle cages and keep those
socks wet. The evaporation from the socks will keep your water supply
pleasantly cool.
Whatever you wear, don't skimp on the sunscreen!
Riding in the panhandle in the summer can be mentally challenging.
There were a few stretches, lasting for several miles, when I on my
bicycle was literally the high point in the landscape. At times that
was exhilarating, and at times, depressing. There were no terrain
features, other vehicles, or manmade structures (other than some
4-strand barb-wire fences) in any direction. My only competitors for
Total Terrain Domination were a few head of grazing cattle.
You may have checked out the websites referenced in Claire Petersky's
sig line. If you haven't, I'd highly recommend [Only registered and activated users can see links. ]. There are some
techniques there for keeping things in perspective while you're in the
saddle.
I remember that the best part of my ride was the meadowlarks. they ride
shotgun, more or less, keeping you company in the hopes that your
wheels will kick up some grasshoppers or other goodies.
[Kumen asked about riding across the Texas panhandle and into Oklahoma
in the summer].
Sounds like a good trip. I've ridden a few thousand miles in Texas and
a couple hundred in Oklahoma, plenty of that in the summer, none in the
panhandle. I know about three families in Colorado who are from Borger
and I went to college with a couple of people from Pampa.
Regarding your specific inquiries:
1. [ride preparation]. Do you plan on doing all 150 miles in one day?
Or will you split this into two days? 150 miles in one day takes a good
deal of effort and conditioning. Even at a slow pace you can bonk if
you're not prepared. You still need to be reasonably fit to do 75
miles/day, but you don't have to be superman. Go on a reasonably long
ride (50 miles or so) a couple of weeks before your 150 mile journey.
You'll get a much better feel of what you are capable of. I've been on
rides where I'm at a relaxed 14 mph pace for 20 miles, then suddenly my
legs just turn to lead and it's a struggle to get above 10 mph. 150
miles at less than 10 mph makes for a very long riding day.
2. [food, water, clothing].
*FOOD* Gu or equivalent works well for me, with occasional stops for
something a little more substantial. Avoid burgers, chili dogs,
chicken-fried steaks, etc -- I've made that mistake and my belly made
me pay. Stopping at Braum's or DQ in all the little towns for a small
snack and air conditioning might be a good idea.
*WATER* Hydration will be critical. When riding in extreme heat, I've
gone through two large water bottles every 20 miles. I've finished
rides with my clothing white with salt.
*CLOTHING* Whatever is comfortable with you. Wicking polyester
fabrics will keep you cooler. Polyester blocks UV better than cotton.
Don't forget the sunscreen. You'll sweat it off so reapply. You'll want
gloves for a ride that long. I can't stand headbands, but many people
consider them essential. You will have streams of salty sweat dripping
and stinging your eyes. Shades are essential.
3. [mental]. A meditative state-of-mind -- almost a trance -- works
well for me on long rides or long runs. Makes the pain go away. Don't
do this in heavy traffic.
Unsolicited advice, etc:
0.1. Don't count on the phone to bail you out of anything. Too many
people in the Colorado backcountry die because they substitute the
phone for the ten essentials and good sense. If you get disoriented
from heatstroke, you won't be aware of your distress until it's too
late.
0.2. You say you're diabetic. Type 1 or 2?
0.3. If you haven't done so already, get slicks for your bike. Don't
forget spare tube, patch kit, pump, tire levers, and maybe a little
duck tape and a chain tool or multi-tool. Know how to repair/change the
tube before you go.
[Kumen asked about riding across the Texas panhandle and into Oklahoma
in the summer].
Sounds like a good trip. I've ridden a few thousand miles in Texas and
a couple hundred in Oklahoma, plenty of that in the summer, none in the
panhandle. I know about three families in Colorado who are from Borger
and I went to college with a couple of people from Pampa.
Regarding your specific inquiries:
1. [ride preparation]. Do you plan on doing all 150 miles in one day?
Or will you split this into two days? 150 miles in one day takes a good
deal of effort and conditioning. Even at a slow pace you can bonk if
you're not prepared. You still need to be reasonably fit to do 75
miles/day, but you don't have to be superman. Go on a reasonably long
ride (50 miles or so) a couple of weeks before your 150 mile journey.
You'll get a much better feel of what you are capable of. I've been on
rides where I'm at a relaxed 14 mph pace for 20 miles, then suddenly my
legs just turn to lead and it's a struggle to get above 10 mph. 150
miles at less than 10 mph makes for a very long riding day.
2. [food, water, clothing].
*FOOD* Gu or equivalent works well for me, with occasional stops for
something a little more substantial. Avoid burgers, chili dogs,
chicken-fried steaks, etc -- I've made that mistake and my belly made
me pay. Stopping at Braum's or DQ in all the little towns for a small
snack and air conditioning might be a good idea.
*WATER* Hydration will be critical. When riding in extreme heat, I've
gone through two large water bottles every 20 miles. I've finished
rides with my clothing white with salt.
*CLOTHING* Whatever is comfortable with you. Wicking polyester
fabrics will keep you cooler. Polyester blocks UV better than cotton.
Don't forget the sunscreen. You'll sweat it off so reapply. You'll want
gloves for a ride that long. I can't stand headbands, but many people
consider them essential. You will have streams of salty sweat dripping
and stinging your eyes. Shades are essential.
3. [mental]. A meditative state-of-mind -- almost a trance -- works
well for me on long rides or long runs. Makes the pain go away. Don't
do this in heavy traffic.
Unsolicited advice, etc:
0.1. Don't count on the phone to bail you out of anything. Too many
people in the Colorado backcountry die because they substitute the
phone for the ten essentials and good sense. If you get disoriented
from heatstroke, you won't be aware of your distress until it's too
late.
0.2. You say you're diabetic. Type 1 or 2?
0.3. If you haven't done so already, get slicks for your bike. Don't
forget spare tube, patch kit, pump, tire levers, and maybe a little
duck tape and a chain tool or multi-tool. Know how to repair/change the
tube before you go.
Hmm... I'm no doctor, but I seem to remember from high school biology
that there are a couple different types of diabetes. Low blood sugar
and high blood sugar can be the result, depending on what you've got.
I've also learned in a journalism class that I had that diabetics
sometimes act "drunk" when they don't have their medicine. The
symptoms are the same as being drunk - slurred speech, reduced
coordination and judgement, vision impairment, etc.
Hmm... I'm no doctor, but I seem to remember from high school biology
that there are a couple different types of diabetes. Low blood sugar
and high blood sugar can be the result, depending on what you've got.
I've also learned in a journalism class that I had that diabetics
sometimes act "drunk" when they don't have their medicine. The
symptoms are the same as being drunk - slurred speech, reduced
coordination and judgement, vision impairment, etc.
Thank you for the advice. I'm Type 2 and on oral medications. i take
my meds, ride for exercise and eat appropriately. My diabetes doesn't
scare me so much as does the heat and the lonliness. However, I'll
adjust to the heat as I ride behorehand. And I'll deal with the
lonliness as I've always done before: I'll sing, talk, listen to
music. I've been riding nearly 3 years now and I've never ridden with
anyone else. The only group I knew about for sure rode on an evening
I couldn't. Perhaps I ought to look closer. Matter of fact, my LBS
might know of groups riding. Time to take the bike in for a check up
and repair anyway. I'll ask when I take it in.
I did ride tthe Tour D' Cotton in Childress in October, but that was a
real mess. This was the first time they've done anything like this and
they didn't have half the ducks in a row. I rode alone becuase the 30
mile group left fifteen minutes before registration closed. I missed a
turn because the route wasn't marked real well. The SAG vehicle was
watching three rides. I got lost and rode 14 miles out of the way
before they found me. Wound up riding 44 miles that day. Like I say,
it was the first ride the Childress group had ever sponsored a ride.
I'll ride again. And I did quite well.
I plan to ride to Wheeler the first day. Think that's about 90 miles.
I'll stay overnight and then finish the rest the next day. I hadn't
considered the wind and you're right. I'd probably have the tail wind.
So I'll ride from Amarillo.
>Get slicks for your bike.
I ride the trails in Palo Duro Canyon a lot. Would I need different
tires for riding down there or will the slicks work equally as well? I
don't have the equipment you mention, but I'll get them.
All I plan to carry with me are food, water, and sunscreen . My
girlfriend will meet me in Wheeler and bring changes of clothes,, etc.
along with her love and support.
I appreciate your advice and will keep you updated as I prepare to go.