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Whidbey Island (and portable heat!)

whidbey.jpg

Today, a group of S-T.n folks decided to take advantage of the holiday and head out for a winter's ride. It was a relatively cold day in the mid-to-high 30s, but clear and (for the most part) dry. The seven of us met up at the Mukilteo ferry dock this morning around 9:30 for the ride to Whidbey Island. The plan was to cover the length of Whidbey, then head back to the mainland near Anacortes and back down into Seattle. This worked out, for me, to be about 130 miles, give or take, and no doubt more for the folks coming from Seattle and south of there.

On the ferry ride over, there was a single State Trooper sent up front with us bikers, and I thought it was an interesting picture: we've got you surrounded, Officer!

surrounded.jpg

Whidbey Island is pretty lightly developed; the only good-sized community on the island is the town of Oak Harbor, which surrounds a naval air station operating one of the few Prowler squadrons still around. Most of the ride, then, was through agricultural and rural areas, along a two-lane undivided road, and there was an unfortunate amount of car traffic slowing us up. Large sections of Hwy. 525 on the island are marked with double-yellows, even when there's clear view in all directions and plenty of room to pass; I'm convinced they did it just to piss us off. Anyway, we made pretty good time. The group stayed pretty close together, rather than rubber-banding out as on the Mt St Helens ride, with the notable exception of Montyburns on his Bandit 1200, who had to pull off and warm his tragically frigid hands. I think we sold him on heated grips with this ride.

Near the north end of Whidbey, as we approached Deception Pass and the bridge to Fidalgo Island, a light dusting of snow began to fall. It was a very surreal experience, tearing along clear roads in a convoy of cyclists, warm and dry inside my gear, and watching snow drift down to disintegrate on my visor. We stopped at a restaurant on Fidalgo that one of our number had been to before, but they were renovating their kitchen and couldn't serve much food. We decided to try anyway, which was a mistake: the food was pretty damn bad, served on paper plates with plastic silverware, and the kitchen-renovators were hard at work with their powertools. It was described by one of us as "like having a picnic in a construction zone."

After lunch we headed back to the mainland, and were guided back towards Seattle along an interesting and terribly-confusing series of two-lane roads, rather than slabbing it down along I5. I am confidant that I couldn't retrace that path if I needed to, so I'm glad at least one of the others knew it well. I guessed at the route shown above for this second leg, and though I'd guess I'm pretty close, I certainly wouldn't swear to it.

I felt very good about my riding today; it certainly wasn't as technically challenging as parts of the St Helens ride, but there were some very nice sweepers and a few sharper corners. I know the others could probably have taken them quite a bit faster, but I get the sense that no-one was riding at 10/10ths, myself included. I've clearly been learning quite a lot in the months since my last group ride, and feel a lot more comfortable on the road with others. As usual, Zoë was the smallest bike on the road, but she kept up just fine.

New Gear Report: I picked up a Gerbing heated vest yesterday, in anticipation of a cold ride today, and I am positively sold. I wired it to the battery last night, and added a rheostat for fine temperature control, and with the vest and grips running, today's weather was no problem. The Gerbing doesn't just make you not-cold, though - it seems to give that same beautiful sensation of bone-deep heat as lying in front of a roaring fire. It's a wonderful addition to my gear, and I'm sure will make winter riding much more comfortable.

The vest I chose has a tall heated collar which comes to my chin, and that keeps my neck nice and warm, and keeps some of the cold wind off my face as well. It's slightly loose, which isn't optimum; I'm not sure if I should have a smaller size or not, but it does seem to keep me very comfortable. We'll see; maybe it can be altered if needed. I wore it today over a long-sleeved cotton T-shirt and was more than satisfied.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on February 20, 2006 4:39 PM.

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