Category: Blog Posts

  • Anticipated Weekend

    Anticipated Weekend

    Altitude has its Advantages. Nestled in the heart of the Little Belt Mountains you’ll find Showdown Ski Area . Since 1936, Showdown has been known for its family friendly atmosphere and amazing all natural snow.

    Hello from the Break Espresso in downtown Missoula Montana where I sit looking out the window at a beautiful sunny day in its infancy. I have in front of me a muffin of unknown species but I do know that it has chocolate chips in it. It seems to be a mix between a bran muffin and a chocolate chip cookie, quite tasty with a cup-o-joe. This is a big weekend with two big events. The first big event is a race on top of Kings Hill Pass just north of White Sulfur Springs and the other big event is the arrival of my friends from New York.

    Today is building up to be a busy one. I have to gather supplies with no cash on hand and manage to make my way to the Showdown Ski Area where Ill camp and race Sunday morning at the King of the Hill Mountain Bike Challenge .

    Once I have raced I must rush home to pick up my friends from New York as they arrive around 4 PM. It will be quite a day Sunday as it will seem that the race will not end until I make it back before 4.

    So here I sit now enjoying the benefits of caffeine making Citi Bank’s grocery list and prepare to get Citi Bank gas before setting out on this week ends big adventure. Life goes on so don’t go on with out life! What’s in your Wallet?

  • I Smell Smoke

    I Smell Smoke

    I just woke up and was suprised to smell smoke when I let my dog Marcy out for a walk. As I look off into the Western skies I see the signs of a forest fire. So far I have not heard any news so I am suspecting that this smoke is from the Bearmouth fire just East of us. This is bad news as my friends fly in fron New York this weekend. So guys, expect temperatures in the 100s and forest fire conditions with smoke, restrictions, and poor air quality. Lets hope this outlook changes as I prepair to get out of town for the weekend and go to Kings Hill for a race.

  • Blue Point Trail Tonight

    Blue Point Trail Tonight

    Sipping on a cup of coffee this morning as I wake up and see for the first time cloud cover I think to myself, “Its Thursday”. We have had bad luck on Thursdays although last Thursday was magnificent. Today we are riding from the top of Lincoln Hills Drive and will ride up the Blue Point Trail a ways! Last night I rode route 12 out of fort Fizzle on a relaxing spin aboard the road bike. I am really loving the hot weather.

    In fire news the Bearmouth fire (just East of Missoula) in getting pretty serious and is not even in the early stages of being contained yet. I hope they don’t close I90 as that would make for a huge trip on Saturday as i go to Kings Hill Pass for a mountain bike race.

    This weekend is race number 5 of the Montana Off Road Series and is being held at the Showdown Ski Area . At first I was thinking Great Falls but now that I look at the map it will be to Helena and then North East to Kings Hill pass. Should be fun. And to mention fun … as soon as I get back Paul, Lucy, and Niko will be landing in Missoula so I have to rush to get back.

    Speaking of rush to get back … id better run off to that societal jail called “WORK”.

    Today in history.

  • Fire In Roundup

    I just heard on the news this morning about a fire just 14 miles south of Roundup. I have family about 10 miles south of Roundup so I am concerned. If anyone has any information please let me know. I just had breakfast and have finally come up to speed enough to start prepairing for work. Tonight is the Weekly Online Chat and I am hoping that a certain web lodge member was able to complete her journey and can join us to tell the story.

  • Thompson Park XC MTB Race

    Just polished off my morning plate of potatoes and eggs and thought, “Why not dash off a quick blog post to spill the beans on yesterday’s race in Butte, Montana?” So, here we are.

  • Race Tomorrow … ?

    Race Tomorrow … ?

    Hello all from Break where I am sipping some coffee and eating a lemon cream scone. I would like to shout out to my friend Pablo, welcome back man! And also kcooper, I hope you get the car back on the road and onward to your destination (if you know kcooper, you know where she is going).

  • Packing On The Oatmeal

    Here I sit, gingerly, sucking down the last of my Cream Of Wheat in my basement apartment making decisions. I am making decisions on when I should try to get on the bike again. I could go to tonight's Thursday Night Ride but then I would have to stand all the time and not sit down … because I cant!

    Yesterday I took it easy and just lay around with oatmeal packs trying to draw out the poison that is keeping me off the bike. This morning it does seem to be a little better and even not as infected and swollen as yesterday. So I am hopeful.

    This weekend is race # 4 in the Montana Off Road Series which has been a disaster so far. Apparently I only got .5 point for my first place (age category) win in Billings and only .5 point for my big blow up effort in Anaconda . Last weekends race in Bozeman will not yield any points either. I really expected to be in the top 5 at this point. So that is why this weekend is so important. But now this!

    So what to do … I guess Ill wait and see what happens tonight. At the very least I would like to show up and say hi to every-one. Maybe Ill hike what they ride, but for now I am dreaming of going riding and standing the entire way … like a muscle endurance workout.

  • Cycling In Jeapordy

    Well it is back. I dont know what brings it on. The only thing I can tell it is from stress. I got real stressed out at work again and now it is back. Some kind of tumor or infection and it is spreading like wild-fire again.

    It statrs out like a little irritation, something that is not uncommon for someone who is cycling all the time.

  • Web Lodge Online Meeting Tonight

    Hiking BudyHello from my little den of an apartment as I sip down the last remnants of my bowl of "Cream of Wheat". Breakfast will soon turn into a scramble to get ready for work so I just wanted to take this blog-able opportunity to invite anyone to stop in tonight at 8 PM (mountain Standard Time) for a chat with myself and others.

    Yesterday went as well as can be expected as I did get my laundry done and watched a movie. I would highly recommend "Motorcycle Diaries", what a great movie. Bravo, Bravo!

    Tonight I am torn between a ride on the mountain bike and taking Marcy out for a two hour hike. The later is probably what I should do but I will leave it up to mother nature. If it is nice Ill bike and if it is stormy I will hike. Well see!

  • PDA Blog – Doing Laundry

    I am sitting at the Green Hanger waiting on my laundry to finish drying. Marcy an I just got back from the Big Dipper where I redeemed my free coupon and cashed in on free "doggy cone". Walking pt Tipus I wished I had the cash for dinner. I am exhausted as I sit here on the customer couch and sweating from the hot and humid laundry mat air.

    Today at work was the usual stress induced panic / screw you all session at the rock. I think more and more each day how I need to get into a different situation. If only my 1st employer could of paid just a little more.

    I just sent off a request deferment from Sallie Mae and my student loans. I doubt it will do any good since I already defaulted.

  • Bohart Bash

    Hello from the Break espresso, it is sunny and nice outside. I am enjoying a cup of joe and a snickerdoodle. Unfortunately the day old cinnamon rolls are gone so I had to do a snickerdoodle. I just got back home last night from the Bohart Bash Mountain Bike Race . It was the best race I have been at so far but actually one of the worst results of the series for me. I got home last night at 5:30 and crashed. Waking up at 5a.m. it was all I could do to lock the car up before going back to sleep. Now I am awake and ready to go.

    It all started Saturday morning when I woke up 1 hour after the alarm went off. I was already an hour late. I had to be at the race by 8 am to register and it was 5 am. I was supposed to pack Friday night but had a beer and chips instead finally falling asleep at around midnight. The stress at work played a part in this.

    I was on the road and hammering down I90 at 6. It seems that I got behind every driver from hell and all I could grab for breakfast was a bag of pretzels. I reacted the Rock Creek turnoff just as the sun came up right into my vision. I almost hit a hitchhiker as the road was impossible to see. I hammered on in hopes that I wouldn”t miss the registration.

    Just off of Pipestone Pass I hit construction and it was bad. 35 miles an hour for 10 to 15 miles. This added to my tardiness. Once back up to top speed I decided that if I did not drive 90 miles an hour I would miss the race. So I hammered on.

    At 8:30 I reached Bozeman and immediately got lost. All seemed hopeless as I headed back into town after being on the wrong access road. I had never been to Bridger Bowl. Oh well, this is the first season. I was sure I had missed the race. Finally I found myself leaving Bozeman heading north to the ski area. It was quite a ways out of town but the scenery was astonishing. Definitely the most majestic venue so for a race.

    I made registration 20 minutes before the start of the expert race. I had forgot my number plate and lost my NORBA racing license, still I had hopes of being in the race. After talking to officials they confirmed that I was indeed William Martin age 40 ready to race expert. I was in.

    The race start was different that previous races and why not, this is the Montana Series. It was a la mains start (I may have misspelled that). We ran across a biathlon shooting range to our bikes before mounting and starting up the first climb. That started the ol heart rate into the hellish threshold area. There was no pre riding the course so the first lap was an introduction to the coarse for me.

    There was some climbing in this race but what made it hard was the short but steep sections. There were about 5 of them and slowly they took their toll as on my last lap I had to fight from passing out. The sun was out and it was getting hot. The day was beautiful, dusty, and a great day for a race.

    I gave it my all and had thought that I had done well. After finished came the familiar heat stroke session and with it came the thought that I must have done well. After all I kept my heart rate perfectly under the anaerobic threshold until the end of the race. I gave it everything and waited to see the results.

    As the results were posted I was not too surprised by the 11th place finish so I looked at the ages to see f I beat my peers. I had not in fact came in 5th in my age category. That sucks and to make it worse I was 30 minutes from the main pack. I am currently trying to figure out what went wrong. Again, stress from work has to be taking its toll.

    The race itself was awesome. Free micro brew, live music, and pizza. Also the swag was awesome. Free socks and cool water bottles were plenty. The course was fantastic and full of twisty single track. A great venue under the Bridger range with great weather. It was the greatest race I have been to in a long time and if my results would of been better it very well could of been the best time ever.

  • Finding Time to Ride

    Created by DALL-E to fill in posts that don’t have a image for blog functionality (prettiness)

    Man, if the walls of Break Espresso could talk, they’d probably be muttering about my caffeine addiction by now. Thirty hours, 15 cups of joe, and 4 questionable pastry decisions later, I emerged with a new website and a serious case of the jitters. Turns out, battling rogue hackers on my blog takes a toll. Speaking of casualties, comments are officially kaput. But hey, at least I found time for an epic 30-mile ride to Blue Point.

    Now, picture this: me, perched atop my trusty steed, conquering a 7,000-foot climb in the Rattlesnake like nobody’s business. Sure, I might have envisioned a leisurely three-hour cruise, but hey, when a sunset that rivals a Van Gogh painting beckons, you gotta answer the call, right? Three hours and forty-five minutes later, my legs were pudding, but my soul was soaring. (Although, my GPS might have been a little too enthusiastic with the “epic” label.)

    Fast forward to the present, and the new website is, well, half-baked (don’t worry, I have a mountain of content to upload). But hey, gotta crawl before you can code, right? Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a bed and a four-day weekend calling my name (even if it’s technically creeping in from the opposite coast). Time to recharge and dream up even more website-building adventures. Stay tuned, folks!

  • Stewart Peak Trail in 1:53

    Stewart Peak Trail in 1:53

    Sitting at Break Espresso, I’m enjoying my second day off during this 4-day weekend. Currently indulging in a cinnamon roll – those who know, know it’s something special – and blogging about my record-setting climb yesterday. I started at the parking lot, heading up Spring Creek all the way to the wilderness boundary.

    I began at a steady pace, with aspirations of middle chain ring all the way up. However, about 30 minutes in, I hit my limit. My heart rate skyrocketed to a record 179 beats per minute for this year. On the steepest part near the Trail of Tears runoff junction, I teetered on the edge of unconsciousness, struggling to remain upright.

    Gradually, I recovered, but could only manage the granny gear. After 1 hour and 28 minutes, I reached the boundary in the middle ring. The trail felt longer than I remembered, and the tough part now just a memory. I felt amazing. The descent took 15 minutes and left my quads drained, but it was a good kind of exhaustion. I celebrated with a big plate of pasta at home.

    Now, what to do today? Well, besides launching my new website.

    • Terrain Distance: 8.3 miles
    • Climb Distance: 4,152.54 feet
    • Max Elevation: 7,158 feet
    • Starting Elevation: 3,500 feet
  • Holiday Weekend Approacheth

    Maybe that isn't a word, aproacheth! I just sat down with a pan of cream of wheat just after a cup of coffee trying to wake up after a restless night. Last nights Thursday Night Ride was fantastic but brutally hard as I included 4 power sprints. I brought my heart rate up to 170s for 12 minutes. Today I am trying to decide what to do this weekend and the following holiday.

    Currently I am looking forward to just staying in Missoula, relaxing, and getting caught up in some stuff I must do. For one thing I have to finish getting this site fixed and the other is I have to get caught up with my photos. I haven't posted sine the Idaho race in April … thats a long time ago.

    Another contributing factor in me staying in Missoula ifs the lack of funds. I will not get payed for Monday and Tuesday so that means two weeks with out food. Also the Bozeman race is next weekend so I need to save up what little I now have to try and get to that venue. Sooo …. looks like no food for this week as well. May have to use ol Citi Bank Card, ”Whats in your wallet?“.

    I would like to thanks my friends who have helped me eat and stay healthy. Without you I would be locked up in my apartment too hungry to ride. Thanks!

  • Single Track, Movies, and Sun

    The news says, “another hot one today.” Yea right! It’s called summer and it is finally here. The single track out at Coyote Coolie was hot and dusty just the way I like it as some friends and I tore it up on Sunday. All this and I am thinking of getting this site up and running the way it used to be. Currently only I can post items and many can not even see my site due to security issues with certain IP addresses. Stay tuned!

    Last night was movie night as I watched “Berlin” and neat little movie about the massacre at the Berlin Olympics. Well not much to say and I am coffee induced as well.

    Tonight is some single track at my “rainy Day Solution” trail in the Rattlesnake.

    Other than that we have the on line meeting tonight so maybe Ill see you there.

    In family news, mom goes in for emergency surgery today to repair last weekends fall. Another fall last night and I am starting to worry and feel bad. Why do they live so far away?

  • Breaking Through – Mormon Peak Ride

    Yesterday was a very nice warm sunny day in Western Montana and on tap according to my training plan was to do a race pace ride. Enter the Mormon Peak Run. I called a ridding buddy, gathered him up, and headed to the Mormon Peak Road off route 12 (about 3 or 4 miles East of Lolo). We rode and I won the world championships passing the world champion 1/3 of the way up the climb. It was a glorious moment.

    We started riding and at 5 minutes I turned around and went back to the truck … then … the race was on. The goal, was to catch my friends and his was to defend his position. It was a glorious battle but one important thing happened .. I was finally flying up a climb … like the old days.

    My friend had helped me to capture my spirit and it came out in a big way. I was able to get my max heart rate 3 beats over a previous mark … and then keep going t the top. I topped out at 56 minutes and I had climbed in a gear ratio that previously was only used on the flat trails. I chased him down and went harder and harder and suddenly my confidence grew to a point where I wondered just how fast I could climb up the long climb. Something clicked, yesterday was a turning point, and I finally broke through.

    My friend did a great climb as well beating my last year time I had done on the old K2. Todays plans … going for a ride; What else?

    Mormon Peak Run

    16.25 miles
    4,201 vertical feet of climbing
    6,374 max elevation
    2:45 minutes
    location: top secret!

  • Broke

    I am at the Break Espresso this morning after a week of bad luck. I have a lemon scone, a cup of joe, and I see the person that I am here to meet is logged onto my site. This week started out as the usual stressed out ”have to work“ week but by the end of Thursday's TNR ride at Woody Mountain it was obvious that I would be glad for a weekend, and a break. And I am!

    The Thursday night ride started out with a buddy needing to patch his sidewall in his tire. But then the bad luck shifted. Already my Camel Back was broke so I had to ride with only one watter bottle. But then when I tried to help I took off my glasses and they fell on the ground. Next thing I know … CRUNCH. I had stepped on them.

    Friday at lunch I was glad the weekend was almost at hand. I had received a pay check and was happy that finally I could get groceries after a week off fasting. I arrived at work and went to roll up my window. CRUNCH SMASH!

    Ok, it was bad enough the my sister was in the hospital and my mom was all stressed out but now I had shattered my window. So Friday night after bitching to everyone I could find I finally settled down enough to rip apart my car door to see the damage. The SMASH wasn't a shatter after all, it was more like a spoingggg. The cables had came apart and exploded in a mess of wire giving a sound of crunching glass. The window was not shattered after all.

    Good news right! Lol! Mom called me later at around 11 pm … she had fallen and broken her wrist. Was is even worse it that it was 110 degrees in Yuma yesterday and she couldn't get off the ground. If dad wasn't there …. whats next higher power, bring it on. Its summer and I have a kick ass mountain bike and I am going riding today. Cant get me down!

  • In a Fog

    In a Fog

    I just had the last bit of deer meat that a good friend so gracefully gave me for breakfast. It was good and now I am hoping to actually get some money today to finally get some groceries. Last week I sacraficed all my normal living expendatures to go racing and camping. After suffering wothout food all week I have reached a new beginning … and maybe this weekend Ill stay home from the races and rest. Anybody up for a mountain bike ride Sunday? Untill then reach me at the coffee shop on on a dirt trail in and around Missoula.