Monday, July 18, 2016

Day 29 Sioux Falls-Worthington

Miles:  70.98
Terrain: Farm land, not many hills, several small towns
Depart:   7:10 AM     Arrive:  2:11 PM
Riding time: 5:32:03

Average Riding Speed: 12.8


Today's Ride

Thanks to all of you for your kind words and encouragement following my Sunday post.  Last night when I told Julie that I was going to bag the trip, she said I should really give it one more day and see if anything changed.  I explained to her that there is no way out of Worthington, MN, not even a rental car, so riding one more day means riding two more days—and tomorrow is a 110-mile day.  She gave me some reasoning I couldn't argue with.  She said I should ride today, and if I decided I couldn’t go on I could just ride in the van tomorrow to Mankato and then return from there.  The validity of her logic was hard to argue with. 

So I rode today. The route out of Sioux Falls was on a bike path and took us past THE Sioux Falls.
  Riding conditions were perfect until late afternoon when some headwinds boiled up again.  But it was nothing like what we’ve dealt with recently.  Despite the generally good conditions I struggled.  My speed was terribly slow for what amounted to an almost flat ride.  I will try to ride tomorrow, but if I don’t feel any better physically and mentally, I may at one of the sag stops get in the van and ride in the van to Mankato.  In that case, I’ll leave Mankato Wednesday morning and head home.  If I can’t finish the cross country trip I’ll be a little disappointed, but it won’t be the end of the world.  If I don’t finish, there will really be nothing about my life that will change.  Just as there won’t be anything about my life that will change if I do finish the trip.  So I will simply have to see what happens tomorrow and then decide what to do. 

The only highlight of the day was reaching another state—Minnesota.  And passing the 2,000 mile mark.  Arriving in Minnesota was significant for me for two reasons:  it’s the home of my lifelong devotion to the Minnesota Twins.  And so far the road surfaces are a whole lot better than the ones in South Dakota.


Stay tuned (as they used to say in TV Land) for the next chapter tomorrow.

9 comments:

  1. Best wishes for a good day today, Bruce! What you've done and seen to date is most impressive no matter what you decide to do today! Must admit I'd love to see ya get a bit close to NY Yankee territory though!.. Ha!

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    1. Had I continued, I hate to tell you that the tour would end up in Boston Red Sox territory! (They are only slightly below the Yankees on my 10 least liked teams list!)

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  2. Your poor performance is probably a byproduct of your mental attitude like a hitter in a slump. Besides there is no such thing as a "poor" performance, you aren't competing against anyone. You've already done more than all your readers have collectively. Keep with it.

    Ira

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    1. My mental attitude was a product of my physical struggles. Maybe they should have sent me down to AAA on a bike rehab assignment?

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  3. Glad to hear you still in the saddle cowpoke !!!
    Harmon Killebrew would be proud your still slugging away !!! As they say in Whitesoxs land "keep grinding it out" We are proud of ya !!!

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  4. Hang in there, Bruce! You'll know if it's time to hang up the skates (er, put away the helmet?) Or not. We are all rooting for you; going as far as you have gone at those breakneck speeds is very impressive. I can't imagine that I'd ever be able to do a ride like this now that I've seen the speed you guys move. Maybe in a few years I'll be rich & famous and husband, Marci, Julie, you, and me can do the trip in a longer time period so there's more time to enjoy the sights lol. I think I would go crazy with such little downtime to explore towns, parks, and especially restaurants as you have. I totally get why you are mentally exhausted. Do what you need, and know that everyone supports you!

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    1. (We'll make my parents drive the support van, of course ;)

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    2. Hey foxy lady, thanks for your support. As you'll see from tonight's comment I did decide that it was time to hang up the helmet. The lack of downtime was indeed one of the factors which made this a real mental grind. Of course when you get rich and famous and you get your parents to drive the support van for us, you'd better not plan to have that trip go to New York. You know your dad will NEVER agree to drive the support van there!

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