Thursday, September 16, 2010

A Rock In A Hard Place


This ride really separated the menhir from the boys -- Rob Coalson (left), Stewart Moore, David Murphy, me, and Mark Nessmith.

It appeared on the horizon like a dark thorn protruding from the flesh of the Earth.

They call it the Stone Shepherd or the Stone Man -- a prehistoric menhir, or standing stone. A megalith. A monolith. Thousands of years old. A tapered 3.3-meter tall rock, poking out of the soil like a frost-bitten finger, whose original purpose -- like that of the hundreds of other menhirs across Europe -- is largely unknown.

Perhaps it was a territorial marker or helped an ancient people make sense of the seasons for planting purposes. Some menhirs may have marked the graves of warriors or been used for fertility rites.

No one really knows.


The menhir.

This menhir was in a farmer's field a few hundred meters outside the Czech village of Klobuky, some 50 kilometers northwest of Prague. Our ambitious mission -- suggested by my cycling buddy Dave Murphy, who's in much better shape than I and who feels no hesitancy in suggesting Tour de France-worthy excursions -- was to ride from Prague to Klobuky, pay our respects to the stone, and then return, with lunch and perhaps a few beers in between.

I love dolmens and standing stones and megaliths and passage tombs and cairns, but had no idea that such things existed here in the Czech Republic. (In fact, Dave told me there's even a small menhir in my neighboring village of Horoměřice).

So I loved the idea of this ride but was a little daunted by its length -- from my home village of Černý Vůl, it would be about 90 kilometers round-trip.


On the way to Okoř, looking back toward Velké Přílepy, in the rising sun.

I haven't exactly been tearing up the trails this summer, and I was worried my legs might fail me somewhere along the way.

In the end, I had good reason to worry.

Turns out there'd be five of us on this ride -- me, David Murphy, Stewart Moore, Rob Coalson, and Mark Nessmith.

Sunday dawned misty and cool but with an insistent sun burning its way through the fog.

Stewart and I decided to ride the first leg of the trip together and meet the other three -- who'd be coming from Prague proper -- at our favorite watering hole in Okoř. It was only 8:30 a.m., but we'd ridden 10 kilometers or so by this point, so with not a small amount of glee Stewart persuaded the hostess at the wonderful Family Hotel Okoř to pour us a couple of cold ones.


Stewart and I take in some early morning refreshments in Okoř while we wait for our mates.

We took schoolboyish delight in MMSing a photo of our beers to Dave, Rob and Mark, who were still slogging their way to meet us.

The beer tasted good, perhaps even more so because of the illicit hour.

Once assembled, our motley crew set off on a route that would take us from Okoř to Zakolany, Zakolany to Kolec, Kolec to Zvoleněves, Zvoleněves to … Ahh, hell, just check out the map below that I made using my Garmin Edge 305.


What the map doesn't show, however, is that the route consisted almost entirely of hills, steep hills -- most of them, it seemed to me, of the "up" variety.

It was a rollercoaster of pain.


Mark can't believe that yet another pub is shuttered on a Sunday morning.

I had tried to carbo-load that morning, eating a couple of slices of brown bread slathered with peanut butter and, of course, there was that beer. I also stuffed a package of Pop-Tarts and a banana in my backpack for the road. I've been having trouble with "bonking" on the trail -- just running out of energy. But I hadn't really been eating properly on my rides -- a misguided effort to lose weight that only backfired in the end, when I could barely limp home.


A pastoral landscape somewhere along the route.

On this ride, however, I discovered that my problem isn't really bonking so much as just out-of-shape muscles. I have lots of energy, and I'm not out of breath on the climbs. The problem is just that my quadriceps hurt like hell near the end of a long ride.

Every revolution of the pedals translates to burning pain in my thighs. An ugly swamp of lactic acid pooling in my legs. That probably means I just need to exercise more, not necessarily eat better (although the latter is common sense, I guess).

Anyway, it was a gorgeous day, the sun shining, the sky blue, the clouds like melted marshmallows, the conversation among our group by turns enlightened and lewd, informed and indecent. A bunch of guys cracking jokes and spouting off on all manner of subjects (some of which they actually knew something about), whilst simultaneously trying to pull themselves up steep, endless hills without revealing to their mates just how much pain they're actually in, lest they appear unmanly.

Most unusually, considering the country in which we were riding, we were greeted by a dearth, a paucity, an absence, an insufficiency of open pubs. We were all in need of a beer or two after 30 or 40 kilometers, but we couldn't find a single open hospoda. Not one.

It wasn't until we cycled into Klobuky itself that we found, on a weedy sidestreet, an open pub, albeit one of the grimiest, slimiest, saddest pubs I've ever seen. However, it did offer cold, crisp half-liters of Branik for 17 CZK, or about 88 cents, the cheapest I've seen a half-liter this year. I offered up my Pop-Tarts to the table and inhaled my banana while no one was looking.

We needed more substantial fare, but there was none to be had here. Or none we were willing to eat, anyway.


The boys celebrating their arrival in Klobuky by having a cold beer in a sad little pub.

After one beer, we decided to find what we'd come all this way to see and cycled a few kilometers outside of town to the menhir.

I must admit to feeling a little thrill chill when I first spied that stone from afar. A small crowd of bikers and hikers were circling it when we arrived to do our own inspection.

What can you say?

The Klobuky menhir is just plain cool. No one knows why it's there, or how it got there, or who erected it. A megalithic mystery.

It almost begs you to touch it, to place your hands upon it to try to detect some cosmic pulse.

This particular menhir features at least one small "cup" mark on one side of the stone and a large round hole drilled deep into the stone about waist high on the other (which of course sparked a whole slew of jokes about romancing the stone, as it were). Not sure what that hole was really for, though. Perhaps it was used in some way to join two stones together.

In fact, this particular menhir is known as the Stone Shepherd because it used to be encircled by eight other stones, which have long since been removed, presumably by farmers upset at giant boulders hampering their harvests.

If you call up the site on Google Earth, you can just make out the markings where the eight "sheep" stones used to stand. (See some of these ghost stones in the picture at left. The real menhir is in the center left.)

We touched the stone, walked around the stone, took pictures of the stone, and made jokes at the expense of the stone.

It was time for another beer.

We retraced out steps to the crappy Klobuky pub and downed another and then set off to retrace our route home.

I, for one, had doubts whether I could make it home. I was feeling OK in Klobuky, but there were 45 kilometers and about 20 hills between me and a hot shower. And we hadn't had lunch yet.

We were all running on fumes.

Our only hope of decent food seemed to rest with the restaurant at the Golf Club Beřovice in the village of the same name. I'd golfed there quite a few times and remembered the restaurant as a clean and well-lighted place.

We limped into Beřovice, our thighs aching, our stomachs growling and our whistles in desperate need of wetting. A plate of spaghetti never tasted so good. The additional two beers were also quite tasty.

Suitably refueled, we set off into the gloaming -- and me, I was moaning -- for the 25 kilometers or so back to Okoř. Where we drank two more beers in celebration of the completion of our adventure.


Back in Okoř and looking pretty good, considering. Except for Mark. (Rob had had to leave a few minutes earlier.)

From there, we all split up, heading home in various directions.

When it was all said and done, I had cycled close to 90 kilometers, my longest and most difficult ride of the year by far.

I had communed with a Neolithic monument.

I had laughed. And cried. And drank seven beers.

And when I awoke the next morning from the deep coma into which I had slipped, I felt as if an angry gang of midgets had kicked me mercilessly throughout the night.

Even my hair hurt. As Mark posted on Facebook a short time later:

"When I got home, my body just began spewing blood from my pores. Epic, but brutal ride."

Let's do it again soon.

RIDE STATS
Length of ride: 87 kilometers
Average speed: 14.2 kph
Maximum speed: 55.5 kph
Time on the bike: 6.07.04
Pivo Index: 7 (!)
Distance ridden so far in 2010: 504 kilometers



"You talking to me? You talking to ME?! Well, I'm the only one here."


Our bike map led us astray at one point when a marked tractor trail fizzled out into nothingness between Kolec and Zvoleněves. We alternately walked and rode our bikes across the soft, grassy soil.


On the trail near Okoř.


Enjoying the silence. Waiting for Stewart in Velké Přílepy.


The beautiful Baroque Assumption Church in the town of Zlonice.


Refilling our water bottles at a public well in Klobuky.


A Sunday spray of flowers along the route.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

The Boys Are Back In Town


That's me on the left, with Stewart (center) and Mark, before setting off on our "urban exploration."

Ahhhhh! It was so good to get back on the bike again.

Tires weighted down with about five kilos of mud. My ass throbbing from its abrupt reintroduction to the saddle. Lactic acid pooling in my thighs, burning like Cholula poured on an open wound. When I got home, I made the mistake of closing my eyes and quickly fell into a deep sleep, still mud-speckled and wearing my riding gear.

I can't believe I'm the guy with the biking blog.

Oh, I had a bit of fun, too.

I was out with my veteran cycling buddies Stewart and Mark. I've ridden a little bit this summer (at least in June), but I hadn't been out on a lengthy, challenging ride since early May, believe it or not. I think those guys have probably been out for at least one big ride since then.

But the point is, none of us has been tearing up the trails this summer.

Speaking for myself, it's been a mixture of general laziness, a lack of desire to ride solo, a busy schedule, and the fact that I was taking care of my mom for six weeks or so while she recuperated from a broken hip.

But there was no room for excuses anymore.

My mom's back home now and doing well, the sun was shining, and Stewart and Mark were interested in riding, too.

We agreed to meet at the old Koliba site at 9:30 a.m. last Saturday. We didn't have any idea where we'd go after that, but it's a good midway point for all of us -- me from my house in Černý Vůl, Stewart from his house in Roztoky, and Mark from his flat in Prague 6.


I love this picture, for some reason. It's of the facade of a bland but still kinda cool '70s-era office building on the east side of the Vltava, near Libeň.

After a brief debate, we decided on a little urban exploration. I'd show those guys Europe's Most Expensive Bike Path, which meant riding back to Prague 6, through Stromovka park, across the Vltava River near the zoo, and then down toward Libeň on the east side of the river.

Although it was an urban ride, there were only a few sections where we'd have to come into contact with cars, which sealed the deal. The rest was wide-open bike lanes and, I thought to myself, basically flat.

Can't ask for much more than that for my First Bike Ride in Ages.
Stewart wanted to show us the new highway that had recently opened in Roztoky, along the river between the village and Sedlec, and what he told us was a path near the highway. I was of the mind to ride on the old route, the now-closed Riegrova road that runs parallel to the new highway.

The lure of the new and unexplored eventually won the day, but we soon discovered that there really wasn't a path -- although you could see how you might think a path existed -- and our bikes quickly sank into the soft ground. It felt like we were pedaling our bikes with about 8Gs pressing against us.


Mud like brownie batter.

In one sense, it felt good to be grinding it up off-road, legs splattered with brownie batter, the taste of it not quite so sweet but somehow inspiring.

In another sense, it sucked.

We soon found a drainage ditch that served quite nicely as a trail, and we were off. Along the river, past the sewage treatment plant, through the lovely paths in Stromovka, across the river on the suspension bridge, then upriver on the pedestrian and cycling path toward Liben.

I'd only been on Europe's Most Expensive Bike Path once before, with my friend Rob. I had a few doubts that I'd be able to find my way again, but sure enough the landmarks all looked familiar and I was able to lead Stewart and Mark on a lovely little ride.

Many of these paths (it's not really one path but rather a number of paths that sort of connect) snake their way through some leafy sections of the Prague suburbs and are quite pleasant to ride. But in the interest of full disclosure, a few sections of the trail look over some pretty bleak neighborhoods and highways.


The trail meanders through some of the less appealing parts of Prague.

Along the way, the trail passed right through a creepy little carnival that featured more unsettling-looking carnies than customers.

I always find these tiny fairs to be really depressing. Usually there's some scratchy Czech pop tunes playing from a loudspeaker, rickety rides that probably haven't had a safety check since the commies were in power, sad-looking ponies waiting to walk forever in circles, and no one really smiling or even pretending to have a good time.


The sad little fair and its creepy carnies (above and below).



We cycled on.

Eventually, we got to a spot out in Prague 14 (!) where we didn't know whether to continue on a route that I sort of knew that eventually would take us to Prague 3 and the Žižkov neighborhood (not the most pleasant route, however, since it involved a lot of sidewalk and city riding) or simply explore in some different directions and see what happened.

We chose the latter, but basically ended up making a loop back to where we started, since all the trails we followed ended on major highways of one sort or another.

We decided just to ride back whence we came and grab a bite to eat at a pizza place, T'amo, that we'd passed that looked rather pleasant. Outdoor tables and all.

The beers tasted very good. My Spaghetti alla Bolognese not quite as tasty, but I had vowed to eat some carbs on my ride so I wouldn't "bonk," which is what had been happening to me earlier in the year.

Mark's pizza of spinach and sour cream (pictured below) was, he says, better than you'd expect "but not necessarily the best in town. It was undercooked, sadly (my biggest bugaboo about Prague pizzas, actually)."

We considered a third beer but thought the better of it. All of us basically had to be home by mid-afternoon for various reasons, so we headed back.

This time, Stewart and I took the "ghost road" between Sedlec and Roztoky, closed now to traffic since the new section of roadway was opened a few months ago.

You have to climb up and over an embankment and a set of railroad tracks with your bike to access the road now. There's no formal crossing point. You feel a bit of an outlaw. But there's no denying the pleasure of cycling on an empty road that you know, as a cyclist, will remain empty.

The sun was still shining, the clouds big and puffy in a bright blue sky. And I was back on my bike and on the trails with my friends. It felt great.

That is until I cycled the last six kilometers or so from Roztoky to Černý Vůl, via Únětice. As I've mentioned in this blog before, I dread that section of trail. It's gorgeous, but it features a subtle elevation almost all the way back, and it always comes at the end of my ride, when I'm tired and just want to get home.

It was all I could do to drag me and my bike home, my thighs crying out after each minuscule incline. It was pitiful.

Once home, I made the mistake of laying on my bed for one second before hopping in the shower and promptly fell asleep, still sweaty and dirty and Spandexed.

I gotta get out more.

RIDE STATS
Length of ride: 52 kilometers
Average speed: 13.7 kph
Maximum speed: 36.3 kph
Time on the bike: 5.11.07
Pivo Index: 2
Distance ridden so far in 2010: 417 kilometers



"One more beer?"


Urban archaeology: The beautiful remains of an old bridge hidden in the undergrowth along the trail.


The ghost road near the Vltava between Roztoky and Sedlec. No cars, no more.



The fantastic pedestrian/cycling path on the east side of Vltava, south of the zoo.


Shadows on the suspension bridge near the Prague Zoo.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

I'm Still Here


Yes, believe it or not, I have ridden.

It's hard to maintain a bike blog when you don't ride your bike. But it's been quite a summer. My mother, who was visiting me here in Prague, fell and broke her hip in early July, and her recuperation really put a damper on my usual routines.

I'm happy to say that she's now back home in Maryland after weeks of recovery here in Prague and doing very well, thanks. (Read about my mom and her accident here and here.)

Anyway, I'm back in the saddle. I went out on Saturday and, well, got a little muddy, as you can see.

Stay tuned for a full report on the ride in the next day or so.

And thanks for hanging in there. I really appreciate it.

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