That was hard!
I’ve liked riding bikes all my life. When I was raising my family, I would get out of the habit of riding, restart for a few years, then fall back out of the habit. Now that my children are gone, I’ve gotten back to cycling, riding more than ever. I’ve come to know some things about myself: I find long hours in the saddle to be very therapeutic - my mind wanders, and I enjoy a hard challenge - it gives me something for which to train.
I’ve wondered for years whether I could actually complete the annual Civil War Century Ride. This event happens every September, starts and ends in Thurmont Maryland, wanders through mountains, and visits Gettysburg and Antietam, hence the name. And the route features 7000+ feet of climbing. I’ve done century rides before, but they were flat. I knew this would be a stretch goal, and it was. I decided last year to do this ride, and I trained all winter and spring. My training slacked some this summer, with two trips that interrupted my routine.
The route has a 1000 foot climb right at the start. I was afraid this would be too hard for me. I shouldn’t have worried. It was strenuous, but when I reached the top of the climb I was surprised, thinking, well that wasn’t so hard. But of course I did that climb with fresh legs and cool temperatures.
Then I had the first of many descents during which I reached speeds in the 30s. There were a few descents during which I reached the 40s. I would bend down into a sloppy aero position to try to preserve kinetic energy for the next climb. During every descent, I was busy checking for hazards ahead and thinking, now I’m going to have to climb again.
So it was up, down, up, down, all day. I was doing OK until the climb at mile 60. That one was brutal. The climb started at about mile 48, with a long, but relatively gentle climb of about 300 feet to about mile 59. Then there was a brief ride through Smithsburg, a right turn onto Raven Rock Road, left onto Ritchie Road, all during a relentless climb of about 800 feet, with all of it steep, parts more than 10%. Coming as it did when it was hot and I had just climbed 300 feet and with 60 miles in my legs, I was pretty tired at the top.
Then came the relatively flat part of the route, about 30 miles with only 500 feet of climbing. The brief ride through the Gettysburg battlefield was cool, and then it was just a long slog back to Thurmont. I reached the end really tired and glad to be off my bike.
I was really glad that I downloaded the course GPX file and installed it on my cycling computer. The route was marked with spray-painted signs on the road to indicate turns. But it was very easy to miss them, especially when the turn came on a descent. I spent most of the day constantly looking at the computer to verify that I was still on course. This route had a lot of turns and I couldn’t trust that the riders ahead of me were doing the same course (there were shorter options) or that they were even on the course that they wanted.
The rest stops were just OK. There were lots of bananas and sliced peaches on offer. But there was also plenty of water and Gatorade.
The weather was OK. I would have liked for it to be a little cooler, but I can’t complain. The temperature at the start was about 70 and it was overcast and the wind was very light, but it cleared up after a couple of hours. It also warmed up and the direct sun made for some hot stretches. With about 20 miles to go I was worried that it might rain as clouds rolled in, but the rain seems to have passed to the east, and it got sunny and hot again, and the wind picked up. It was sunny and windy as I finished.
This was a real challenge; I’m glad I did it; I doubt I’ll ever sign up again for that kind of ride with so many climbs.
Final numbers: 103.6 miles, 7667 feet climbed, maximum speed: 49.9mph.
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