The inaugural edition of the Endless Mountains Liberty Bell 1234K is now complete. Preliminary results have been posted to the website. Please review the results and let me know if they align with your memory. The results will be submitted to RUSA after review and will become official once certified.
Ian and Ben on their way to the Liberty Bell |
All 5 starters (2 preriders plus 3 day-of riders) finished the first ever Endless Mountains Liberty Bell 1234K, a 100% finish rate. These extraordinarily tough randonneurs braved mountains, wind, cold, rain, and dark nights to finish this epic grand brevet. In fact, they crushed it -- or rather they CRACKED the EM Liberty Bell with excellent times, well under the limit. Chapeau to these tough five. Bravo!
EMLB1234K finishers, left to right: |
The massive volunteer effort to support the EMLB was astonishing and much appreciated by the riders. As organizer I was delighted and not a little humbled. Even though I tried to throttle back the volunteer effort when I knew there would be so few riders, volunteers ignored me and went out there anyway to help the small group in a million little ways. Volunteers gave up days of their personal time and drove hundreds of miles to support just three people. It was wonderful to see. Thank you all!
In alphabetical order, the main EMLB volunteers were.
- Ron Anderson [Post brevet beer]
- James Bondra [Vestal Overnight]
- Bill Fischer [Vestal Overnight]
- Pat Gaffney [Philly Start/Finish and Preride]
- Brad Layman [Philly Start/Finish and Preride]
- Chris Nadovich [Organizer, Drop Bags, medals, and swag]
- Joe Ray [On-route support Day 1]
- George Retseck [Wool event jerseys]
- Steve and Susan Schoenfelder [Lewisburg Overnight]
- Bill Slabonik [On-route support Day 2-4]
- Len Zawodniak [On-route support Day 1-4]
Please thank them when you see them. Big brevets can't happen without a core team of volunteers.
It's also important to mention that the above list does not include many other supporters who offered to volunteer and were held in reserve. Thank you for offering, we need to take a rain check on your generosity. Next time we'll need you.
Challenge Coin awarded to EMLB finishers |
Ron Anderson writes...
Congratulations to all five finishers. And to Chris Nadovich and the PAR team of volunteers who made it happen. I can't believe this event will be run again next year. There are a limited number of opportunities for redemption in this life, and I think I see one on the horizon...
Ben Keenan writes...
Thanks Chris and all volunteers (Brad, Pat, Joe, Len, Bill and Steve) for organizing this event. While the conditions were challenging, the level of care and skill of the volunteers made it for me close to a masterpiece and example of what randonneuring is about. Day or night, a volunteer was there about every 60 miles (less than that in some of the toughest sections) with food, water and supplies. I can’t thank you all enough.
The course was magnificent, even in the rain. Time and again, rolling along a creek or river or down a valley, I was struck by how beautiful it was, pretty as a painting only better because on your bike you get to be part of it. To fellow riders Ian and Charlie, the courage and skill you showed managing a tough route was inspiring, many thanks.
Everyone keep riding and hope to see you out on the road soon!
Charlie Martin writes...
Riders. We had 3 starters for the main ride. I quickly found Ben and Ian to be very capable riders, and I wasn't concerned about their ability to complete the ride despite the challenges we faced. Ian has been around RUSA since the beginning and I extracted lots of interesting anecdotes from him. He's from Georgia so we talked about the SR600 route down there and some of the Audax Atlanta riders we both know. Ben had lots to share about the Pennsylvania and Seattle areas, and I enjoyed chatting and riding with him for parts of days 1 and 3.
We both developed knee pain during the ride and finished it out with medication. I'm pretty sure my knee pain developed due to shifting my riding position after I started developing sores due to the constant wet riding conditions. My knee got worse throughout the ride and seems like it will take a good while to recover after getting home. Due to the difficulty of the ride and the individual challenges we had, everyone generally opted to ride at their own pace and keep making progress. I hung back to ride with people when they were close, but I rode the final day as the lanterne rouge. My time on and off the bike was generally efficient, yet I finished with only a few hours to spare. That speaks to the difficulty of the course and the challenges induced by the weather. I could have created a good deal more buffer if necessary, but it would have involved more and more serious quality of life sacrifices
Support. We had 11 volunteers (including 2 pre-riders who also provided support for the main ride), so riders were swimming in support (not just rainwater). The volunteers were very friendly and attentive to our needs. There was a volunteer waiting at nearly every control to expedite things, and usually we didn't need to go inside to buy anything. 4 separate volunteers provided miscellaneous mechanical support for me. Throughout the event I had a handlebar grip straightened, both wheels trued, my chain lubed a couple times, and my wheel hubs partially serviced. I also borrowed a volunteer's front wheel for something like 100 miles, and I think the same wheel was used by a rider in the recent NY-Montreal-NY grand brevet. After the event my shopping list includes a new crankset, new pedals, a new rear hub, a proper pedal wrench that can provide leverage, PB Blaster, and a SRAM Eagle derailleur battery cover. Someone picked me up from the airport and someone else dropped me off. Separate people made trips to get me dinner before/after the ride. Start/finish accommodations were inexpensive, incredibly spacious (we had an entire mansion to ourselves), and facilitated everyone getting to socialize before/after the ride. The support and organization were simply phenomenal.
Pit crew of volunteers work on Charlie's bike |
eBrevet. I was excited to use it, and I liked being able to see the progress for Ben and Ian to know how far back I was. Seeing the pre-riders' comments at controls was fun, and I could imagine that being a popular messaging mechanism with more riders. I encountered a few bugs, and then I transitioned to actively QA testing it. I was bummed that I couldn't use it on day 3 after getting it wedged into an unintended state. I had some fun designing solutions to some of the issues and talking through them with Chris.
Charlie Martin |
Congrats to everyone, I would have liked to be among you. It would be for the next time for sure
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