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When Extra Mileage Isn’t a Bad Thing – Cycling on the Central Coast

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Updated: February 13, 2011
In February of 2010, my father sent an email to my mother, sister, wife, brother and me. It read as follows:

“OK TEAM (notice there is no i in TEAM) here’s the scoop: Lighthouse Ride, end of September (exact date to be provided later when I feel like it), 60 plus miles, commitment, training, support, and most of all a sore butt. But: think about the feeling of accomplishment after you begin to get feeling back into your legs, your arms and hands stop trembling, and your eyes begin to refocus. I’ll have more later, including guest speakers, links, workout schedules from my heart, firm, hard, and software and other technological tools. Keep in touch.”


My family and I had been riding on the Bob Jones Trail a few times and discussed riding more, but none of us saw this coming. Steve Main had thrown down the gauntlet. We had seven months to go from seven or eight miles round trip to over 60. “This should be fun,” I thought.

Having played three sports in high school, and as a regular at lunchtime basketball games, I had only small worries about being able to finish the ride. While I had never been on a bicycle for that long, I was sure that with some practice and training I’d be able to complete the metric century and have fun doing it.

Throughout February and March, my father’s email and the looming Lighthouse Ride inspired us to ride more. My brother and sister participated in a few “training” rides, but a core group of four of us were present on most weekends. While my father and I rode ahead and waited, my mother and wife worked hard to improve their riding. Before long, we rode 20 miles. San Luis Obispo to Los Osos and back. We thought it was a really long ride. When we got back home, 20 miles felt like an eternity. I was sore for a few days after and my wife began to waver about being able to finish the big ride.

In June, we rode from San Luis Obispo to Pismo Beach via Price Canyon and back on the coast–a 25-30 mile ride. In Pismo, we realized we might not have fueled ourselves as well as we should have ahead of time. So the five of us had a good snack, refilled our water, and set off toward San Luis Obispo. The M&M’s I had did what I needed them to do, but my parents struggled and the heat finally got to them 22 miles into the ride. While my wife, sister, and I completed the loop and made it back to the car, the doubt about the group being able to make 60 miles was as great as it had ever been.  While 25 miles was the longest three of us had ever ridden, it was still less than half of what loomed before us.

While I played basketball, football, and baseball in high school, I had never trained myself to participate in any “endurance” sports. I liked the feeling of consistent exercise and being able to take a quick ride after work or on a weekend morning. Unlike other sports, participation didn’t have to be a production. The bike was always there and the road provided solitude and a place to think that few other places could. Combined with sporadic basketball, I began to feel stronger and more fit. Clothes started to fit better and I felt really good.

Our team scheduled rides around fun places and I saw much of the county I’d never really taken notice of before. Edna Valley, the frontage road through Shell Beach, Pismo Beach, and the road to the Oceano Dunes quickly became favorites. The Bob Jones trail became a part of a good ride, not the whole ride.

With the ride was less than a month away, my work schedule got busy. I traveled for two of the four weeks leading up to the ride, leaving little time for the training I’d been enjoying. The week before the ride, I traveled to Honduras for work. Despite being in another country and having lots to worry about I found myself wondering things like how difficult it would be to ride a bicycle in a city in Central America–namely San Pedro Sula.

Upon arrival back to the Central Coast and San Luis Obispo, I was struck with how lucky I am to live here. The calm traffic and great roads make San Luis Obispo county an ideal locale for riding. The more I travel to other places, the more I realize that 70 degree February days are not common in this country. I need to be more thankful more often. But I digress.

Cuesta College parking lot. 7:00. AM. Four of us trained enough to sign up for the ride and we were ready to go. Only one problem: it was warm. On a day that was the hottest of the year throughout the Central Coast, the temperature would rise to a sweltering 110 degrees in San Luis Obispo and will be well over 100 degrees on the coast. At 7:45, when we finally get started, it shouldn’t have been as warm as it was–well over 70 degrees. As we pedaled out onto the road, we felt good. At least we wouldn’t have to worry about getting cold.

Ten miles into the ride. We were all still feeling good. Almost to Cayucos, the group was still riding together and at a decent pace. It was 8:30 and the temperature in the small beach community was rising above 80 degrees. This did not bode well. As we rolled into the designated pit-stop at Hardie Park in Cayucos, the temperature was well above 80 degrees.

About twenty miles into the ride there was a hill. It’s a gradual hill, but in temperatures over 90 degrees by now, it was too much for my dad. At the top of the hill, he bonked (sorry dad). As my wife, mom and I rode into Cambria, my mom was overheated herself and decided that staying with my dad was probably more important than braving 100-plus degree heat.

The Main "Team"

On the way back South on Highway One, ice cold water became warm before I could even take a drink. My wife was a trooper and made it 45 miles as the coastal breeze felt more like the rush of hot air when the oven is opened. Back at the pit stop in Cayucos, the wife had had enough. I would have to pedal the last 15 miles on my own.

Quite a few people passed me during those last 15 miles. I lost count at 12 or 13. As I pulled into the same Cuesta College parking lot, caked in a layer of road grime and sweat, I wasn’t sure whether to be proud of finishing or just relieved that it was over.

Proud or relieved, I was hooked. I have participated in one more ride and my goal this year is to complete a real century–100 miles. I’ve begun to anticipate a good bike ride after work as much as playing basketball at lunch time. For anyone who knows me, that’s saying quite a bit.

As I climbed up Turri Road last week during a sunny weekend ride, the cows were scared away by my heavy breathing. There was no doubt I was suffering after a short California Winter when my bike had mostly stayed in the garage (does anyone know where I can get a good bike trainer?). But the view was beautiful. The herons flying over the back bay, the beauty of the day, and the steady rhythm of pedaling was therapudic. Unfortunately, I got a flat tire twenty miles into my ride that day and had to call the wife to come pick me up. Yep, a great day.

Like the article? Hate it? Thought it was OK? Want to comment on the great Central Coast riding options? Email me at owen@fansmanship.com .