2 days to go before Furnace Creek 508


Today is Thursday. I thought I was going to have a relaxing morning and it was everything but.

#1. It started out with my three year old son having a blowout in his diaper. Which meant I woke up earlier than I wanted to and to quite a mess.

#2. Then I find out one of my crew members changed his flight to San Diego Airport which is 100 miles from my base of operations and in the opposite direction from the race site. It was a shock but a couple of hours later it was resolved and now he is flying into Los Angeles which is better since it is somewhat along the way to Valencia.

#3 The rental van was not going to be ready until 5pm, and they were in San Diego I’m in Huntington Beach. They also couldn’t guarantee Captain’s chairs which would be easier for van setup than bench seats. A tip from another ultra racer about 1/2 rates got me interested in the first place. I had to cancel the reservation and find another van on the day before leaving for the race. Everywhere was sold out for mini-vans…who knew they were so popular. Brandy found a mini van with a decent rate and closer to home. It would be more but we would save on one day’s rental costs and gas costs for the pick up and delivery.

#4 A four digit erroneous charge on my debit card was the next fire to put out. after numerous phones between bank, merchant,merchant services we finally got it resolved…I think.

All this happened before noon. Ok now let’s see if the rest of today goes smoother. I just want to get on my bike.

3 days until FC 508



So what is the Furnace Creek 508 anyway? It is a 508 non stop, crew supported, bicycle race through Death Valley and other remote areas. Along with the 508 miles there are also 35,000 feet of elevation gain. You experience the high heat of the desert and the cold of the mountain passes…truly an epic adventure.

Here is the route and course profile. You can look at the profile above or you can go to the cool 3d graphs broken down by time stations. Doug Dog Sloan put in a lot of work creating this graphs. They are extremely helpful in giving you a feel for the race.

While I was training for 508 FG I was having trouble finding time for the miles. So I decided to commute on my FG. I would commute home on Tues nights and commute to work Wed am. Then commute Thursday nights and commute to work on Friday ams. The commute was 65 miles each way. My Tues/Wed commmute was the toughest because I would leave work at 5:15pm and get home about 9pm, eat, shower and NAP until 1:30am and roll from home at 2:00am. I would ride that early because I had a client at 6:30 and wanted to experience sleep deprivation and night time riding.

5 days to go Furnace Creek 508


Monday early afternoon. 5 days to go before Furnace Creek 508. I thought I would spend a little time talking about my nutrition plan. Last year I had a lot of issues and I think the only thing I can see doing differently is…fewer calories. Shocking, isn’t it? Allow me to explain.

Last year my breakfast was too rich and plentiful, and it was too close to race time. Once on the bike I think I had too many calories (340 per hour) without having fully digested my breakfast.

This year I will stick to only 250-300 calories an hour. I will take most of my nutrition in a liquid form. I will be using products from Sportquest. My primary fuel will be CarboPro 1200 and my electrolytes will come from Thermolytes. There is an assortment of other supplements that I will also use. They have a unique feature where you can submit the race you are doing and Sportquest will send you a race protocol. In the coming days I will post the other supplements so you can see the breadth of their product line. I also plan on drinking a lot more fresh water than I did last year.

I will also be using Red Star Energy tablets to maintain alertness during the wee hours of the morning. I used Red Star Energy during RAAM 2007 with great results.

Furnace Creek 508 Fixed Gear- 6 days to go


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With 6 days to go, I am looking at the race course and trying to remember areas where I suffered last year. I did this event multi-speed last year and I am trying to recollect the harder climbs.

If you have been following this blog during the year, you will remember that I have done two double centuries and numerous centuries on my fixed gear. As far as climbing, I have gone up Palomar Mountain and various other shorter climbs using a pretty big Gear Inch.

One of the things I love about riding fixed gear is the advantage I feel I have over multi-speed riders on shallow grade climbs. I think the 21 mile climb out of Baker is perfectly suited to fixed gear riding.

Today I changed the tires on my bike. I plan on riding tubular tires because the terrain is so bad in certain parts of the race that I would like to lower the air-pressure so that the ride is much tolerable.

In the pictures above you will notice that I have Phil Wood High Flange hubs laced to Velocity Fusion rims 32H with a 25mm rim depth. It is built to the 508 spec. But after riding so many miles from commuting on my tubies this year (I rode tubies on RAAM 2007), I realized that I could ride them at lower pressures to improve ride quality over rough terrain. When riding clinchers at low pressures you run the risk of pinch flats.

I will be riding Mavic Reflex tubular rims 32H laced to Campagnolo Pista High Flange hubs.

Furnace Creek 508 pre race info


Jim Riskas from RED STAR ENERGY has come through again with financial support and product for my next adventure.

RedStar Energy is great way to get your “boost” without that “wired” or “jittery” effect usually associated with energy drinks or too much caffeine. That’s because RedStar Energy is scientifically engineered with amino acids and vitamins to let your mind and body achieve greater alertness and that “get-up-and-go” feeling without large blasts of sugar or caffeine.
So, as we like to say, “Keep the boost…kick the can.”

THANK YOU RED STAR ENERGY AND THANK YOU JIM RISKAS

KOM Series Breathless Agony & Heartbreak Double Century



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I want to thank my sponsors for all their support this season without them I wouldn’t be able to race as strong as I have been. Thank you. Here they are in alphabetical order:
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Accelerade- Sports Drink with Protein a must for Ultra Cycling– Chris Facas
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Bonk Breakers-Peanut Butter and Jelly nutrition bars very tasty –Jason Winn
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Cervelo Bikes– Truly the best engineered and best riding bikes in the world- Phil White
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Finish Line- Your chain is the life of your bike lube, clean it. Love your bike clean it too–David Clopton
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Kenda Tires– You must ride the C2C tire developed especially for RAAM- Jim Wannamaker
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I have been training and working so much lately I haven’t been able to issue my race reports as promptly as I used to. But here I am posting about two events that are part of the Planet Ultra King of the Mountains Series. There are three events are:
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1. Mulholland Century Challenge although I did the Double Century and then the Century the next day.

2. Breathless Agony
3. Heartbreak Hundred which I did the Double Century

So first I will talk about Breathless Agony. 114 miles and 12,000 feet. Of which 11,000 feet in 73 miles. We climb to a max altitude of 8,443 up to Onyx Summit. I had a a great day on the bike. My goal 5:45 and top 30. I did even better than I expected. In training I had done the course in 5:51 so I thought 5:45 was doable. I finished in 5:40 and 21st place overall and 7th out of 144 in 40-49 age group.

Next was the Heartbreak Double Century 202 Miles and 17,000 feet. I had a bad day on the bike. It was my worse race day on the bike this year. I went out with the lead group and suffered quite a bit. By mile 25 I was dropped and 6 riders went away. It continued to get hot during the day and I knew I was heading for a meltdown eventually. It happened sometime before the lunch stop. I was overheating and feeling miserable.
Mile 104. 6 –At the lunch stop I soaked my head twice once when I got in and once before I left.

I stopped consuming calories after my first century. I then started drinking sodas. I had a Mountain Dew at lunch.
Mile 119–Vanilla Cola at the base of the Heartbreak climb.
Mile 126.7 –1 bottle of water
Mile -171.4– I had 1/2 an Orange Sunkist (knock-off).

The last 30 miles I hooked up with another rider who helped me get through the next 14 miles and then I helped him get to the finish. I was not feeling good all day and lost valuable time climbing Old Ridge Route –two years in a row I have faded there.
My goal was sub 14 hours I finished 13:28 for 5th place. I’m quite happy with the end result but the process to get there was one of the most challenging days on the bike in recent memory.

29,200 feet of climbing weekend



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First let me thank the people that make it possible for me to race my bike:.
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Chris from Pacific Health Labs
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David from Finish Line
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Jason from Bonk Breakers
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I just got back from a weekend of EPIC climbing in the Santa Monica Mountains. I did the Mulholland Double Century on Saturday April 14th 203.7 miles with 17,000 of climbing.
On Sunday just because I was already there I did the Mulholland Century Challenge. 110 miles with 12,000 feet of climbing.
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I arrived in Calabasas, the race start, late Friday night. I missed a couple of turns because I was on my cell phone and trying to drive. I should’ve know better. I hate driving in Los Angeles and one missed exit can cost you 1/2 hour of travel time. I had dinner with some friends and then it was time to do bike prep. It’s ironic that I work in a bike shop and I don’t have time to work on my bike until the night before the event .
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There were two ride start times for the riders doing the Double Century. The first start time was 5am and the second start reserved for the faster riders, 6:15 . I elected for the 6:15 start. I believed I could ride with the lead group for a little while and then get dropped. The plan worked until Mile 40 when I dropped my water bottle and had to stop to pick it up. The lead pack just kept going.
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This wasn’t a bad thing. I was feeling really worked riding with the lead pack. Actually I was quite surprised to see how long the lead pack stayed together. Once I was dropped I started riding my own race. The Mulholland Double Century course is very difficult because the climbs are so steep. There aren’t any long climbs– I think the longest climb was 5 miles.
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I felt good all day. I stayed on top of the fueling and supplements. I knew that I faded last year after mile 150. So this year I was forcing myself to drink. It really worked because I felt great. I went liquid fuel all day and had a lull but overall it was a good event.
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The next day, Sunday, I did the Mulholland Century Challenge. 110 miles 12,000 feet of climbing. My challenge was getting enough calories in me on Saturday night so that I could replenish my glycogen stores and be ready to go again. I felt sluggish at the start but as the day wore on I started to get in my groove. But then as the elevation gain continued to accumulate I really just wanted to finish. I wasn’t having fun anymore. But I got through with a little, ok a lot, of help from Brandy as my lovely SAG.
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The hardest thing about these two events is the steepness of the grades. There really isn’t anything that is 6% that climbs for 10 miles. Many climbs are 8-10% with some being as much as 15-20% for at least a mile.
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I have decided not to do Devil Mountain Double because I really need to focus on training for RAAM. The round trip driving to and from San Francisco is time I could be riding my bike. Brandy made that little observation so clear to me. She’s good at that. Devil Mountain Double Century and its 18,000 feet of gain will have to wait another year.