Rides, gatherings, and events for FS 2019
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Kitty.
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AuthorPosts
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February 9, 2019 at 1:51 am #1095416
awitt
ParticipantOne more time – what is the url for the calendar?
February 9, 2019 at 2:45 am #1095417bmif
ParticipantTeam X – Snow Patrol to eat and drink at Chadwick’s in Old Town this Sunday @ 5:30pm. Almost all of us will have 100 miles for the week, so some of us will sleeze from Conte’s and the rest will drive there. #truemeaningofBAFS
All are welcome! Will buy first round (beer or rail liquor) for other team captains that come and help us celebrate our meteoric rise to the top 5 in team standings (1st in team sleezes).
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February 9, 2019 at 3:38 am #1095420rumipumi
ParticipantJessica’s ride is on Saturday February 9.
@Jessica Hirschhorn 187168 wrote:
ONE MORE! License to CHILL Team 9 sponsored ride: All invited!
Cold and windy! Time to reapply the Bar-Mitts and tear open the hand warmer packs.Let’s ride Hains Point to Lake Artemesia.
11:30 start
Meet 11:15 Golf Course Parking , Hains Point972 Ohio Dr SW, Washington, DC 20024
35m RT
Social PaceSTOPS at Bladensburg Waterfront Park (potty), Lake Artemesia (potty and photo op) and
Maryland Meadworks on the way back: 30-45 min for Mead or Coffee.
https://m.facebook.com/marylandmeadworks/
Bring SNACKS!
https://ridewithgps.com/routes/29235379
All genders welcome.
Regards, Jessica
240 286-4815
February 9, 2019 at 7:53 pm #1095437Steve O
Participant[QUOTE=Jessica Hirschhorn;187168
11:30 start
Meet 11:15 Golf Course Parking , Hains Point972 Ohio Dr SW, Washington, DC 20024
Is this happening on any particular day?
February 10, 2019 at 2:57 am #1095449ChristoB50
Participant@komorebi 186987 wrote:
Details:
— Meet at the Starbucks in Lyon Village, 3125 Lee Hwy. in Arlington, at 1:30 p.m. on Sunday, February 10.
— Route: https://ridewithgps.com/routes/29275735, about 20 miles.
— Social pace (12-15 mph), no drop.Hi–did you change the route URL in the posting, after making the original post? (Ie, V.2?)
I swear the first time I read this and clicked the URL I could see the route design… but tonight, it opens up the link, and shows no map at all…February 10, 2019 at 4:02 am #1095450komorebi
Participant@Christob50 187210 wrote:
Hi–did you change the route URL in the posting, after making the original post? (Ie, V.2?)
I swear the first time I read this and clicked the URL I could see the route design… but tonight, it opens up the link, and shows no map at all…I tweaked the route a bit this afternoon, but it should have saved to the same URL, https://ridewithgps.com/routes/29275735. I also had problems opening up the link the first time I clicked on it, but it worked properly after that. Anyway, I saved an identical copy of the route to https://ridewithgps.com/routes/29304930. Hopefully one of those two links will work for you. I’ll also bring a few extra printed copies of the cuesheet to the ride.
February 10, 2019 at 12:59 pm #1095455ChristoB50
ParticipantThanks! Today it worked, apparently opening in “classic mode”, whereas yesterday it appeared to be opening in a different mode at the website…
February 10, 2019 at 2:26 pm #1095457Nadine
Participant@josh 187050 wrote:
Pretty sure it’s around mile 1.8, heading up the stairs from Lee Highway to N Scott St. Here’s some people headed down those stairs during komorebi’s Arlington bike lane ride. Your option to avoid the stairs would be continuing along Lee Highway, climbing N Quinn, making a right on N Scott, and then regrouping.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]19330[/ATTACH]
Looking forward to today’s ride, Komorebi! I’ll be arriving with Anne. I love your rides.
I did have a moment’s hesitation about the issues of carrying my bike up / down stairs, but then I saw Josh’s picture here, and since clearly I did fine with these stairs on your all -bike-lanes-in-Arlington ride… [emoji38] I’m thinking I’ll be fine with them again today…. [emoji16]
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February 10, 2019 at 10:50 pm #1095464ChristoB50
ParticipantWell, that was a whole lot of fun!
Thank you very much Josephine, for creating the excellent duck route and leading the group on a great ride!
I saw some parts of Arlington I’d never been in, despite having lived in N. and S. Arlington neighborhoods for the last 25 years.Not being on Strava, I was delighted to see the Apple Watch/Bicycle Workout properly captured the duck image.
I enlarged the map on my iPhone, took several screenshots of that and pieced them together so I could see it more clearly.[ATTACH=CONFIG]19383[/ATTACH]
February 11, 2019 at 12:12 am #1095465bmif
ParticipantTeam X and young Josh, celebrating all of the fantastic Strava art that other riders created today. Great job, everyone!
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February 11, 2019 at 1:47 am #1095466komorebi
ParticipantThanks to everyone for coming out to the duck ride! Special props to Christob50 for hauling his e-bike up and down the stairs without complaint, camiller for gamely continuing even after a ferocious detour sign reached out and bit her, Nadine and awitt for completing the ride even though they could easily have peeled off when the route went right by their neighborhoods, Steve O for being so determined to complete the duck’s head that he did the Heisman maneuver with several cars on Lee Highway, CBGanimal for doing not one but two Strava art rides today, elizsnyder and Todd for bringing mountain bikes and demonstrating proper stair-riding and curb-hopping techniques for the rest of us weenies on road and hybrid bikes, and lordofthemark and Susan for being brave enough to tackle their first-ever Strava art. That was fun!
February 11, 2019 at 3:15 am #1095467ChristoB50
Participant…According to the heart rate monitor tracking during the route, that first massive staircase gave me my highest heart rate spike of the trip… No surprise!
February 11, 2019 at 12:49 pm #1095475ChristoB50
ParticipantThe write-up I prepared to go with / explain the route map image I’d pieced together, when I shared it with my family (all non-bikers)…
Legends tell of a monstrously huge bird that supposedly resides in, of all places, the suburban jungle of Arlington, VA. Sightings of the bird are rare; information is sketchy, bordering on fantastical. Some say it is actually a legendary ostrich, escaped from the National Zoo, running through the streets at night evading all attempts to capture it. Others say it is a prehistoric relic, like Nessie, hiding out in the pockets of woodland scattered around the county. Still others laugh knowingly, gently shaking their heads, explaining to any who will listen that in fact, the bird in question is so enormous, it is actually amongst us here in Arlington, everyday; but with such size, we don’t even realize it is right under our very feet at all times. They claim we can only see it if we step back — or rather, up — and look down on Arlington from a great height, like viewing the famous Nazca Lines of the Chilean desert.
To find out for myself, I joined an intrepid group of 11 other cyclists today, and we went off on what could possibly become a cyclist’s version of a snipe hunt, to find this elusive avian beast.
Imagine our surprise then, when in fact we were, after 2 1/2 diligent hours, able to confirm and clarify the rumors into fact; indeed, Arlington is home to a bird of simply gigantic proportions — the rare and beautiful Komorebi Arlington Duck, hiding always in plain sight!
February 11, 2019 at 1:49 pm #1095479CBGanimal
Participant@Christob50 187236 wrote:
The write-up I prepared to go with / explain the route map image I’d pieced together, when I shared it with my family (all non-bikers)…
Legends tell of a monstrously huge bird that supposedly resides in, of all places, the suburban jungle of Arlington, VA. Sightings of the bird are rare; information is sketchy, bordering on fantastical. Some say it is actually a legendary ostrich, escaped from the National Zoo, running through the streets at night evading all attempts to capture it. Others say it is a prehistoric relic, like Nessie, hiding out in the pockets of woodland scattered around the county. Still others laugh knowingly, gently shaking their heads, explaining to any who will listen that in fact, the bird in question is so enormous, it is actually amongst us here in Arlington, everyday; but with such size, we don’t even realize it is right under our very feet at all times. They claim we can only see it if we step back — or rather, up — and look down on Arlington from a great height, like viewing the famous Nazca Lines of the Chilean desert.
To find out for myself, I joined an intrepid group of 11 other cyclists today, and we went off on what could possibly become a cyclist’s version of a snipe hunt, to find this elusive avian beast.
Imagine our surprise then, when in fact we were, after 2 1/2 diligent hours, able to confirm and clarify the rumors into fact; indeed, Arlington is home to a bird of simply gigantic proportions — the rare and beautiful Komorebi Arlington Duck, hiding always in plain sight!
Wow! That is beautiful!!!
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February 11, 2019 at 4:43 pm #1095491Judd
Participant@Christob50 187236 wrote:
The write-up I prepared to go with / explain the route map image I’d pieced together, when I shared it with my family (all non-bikers)…
Legends tell of a monstrously huge bird that supposedly resides in, of all places, the suburban jungle of Arlington, VA. Sightings of the bird are rare; information is sketchy, bordering on fantastical. Some say it is actually a legendary ostrich, escaped from the National Zoo, running through the streets at night evading all attempts to capture it. Others say it is a prehistoric relic, like Nessie, hiding out in the pockets of woodland scattered around the county. Still others laugh knowingly, gently shaking their heads, explaining to any who will listen that in fact, the bird in question is so enormous, it is actually amongst us here in Arlington, everyday; but with such size, we don’t even realize it is right under our very feet at all times. They claim we can only see it if we step back — or rather, up — and look down on Arlington from a great height, like viewing the famous Nazca Lines of the Chilean desert.
To find out for myself, I joined an intrepid group of 11 other cyclists today, and we went off on what could possibly become a cyclist’s version of a snipe hunt, to find this elusive avian beast.
Imagine our surprise then, when in fact we were, after 2 1/2 diligent hours, able to confirm and clarify the rumors into fact; indeed, Arlington is home to a bird of simply gigantic proportions — the rare and beautiful Komorebi Arlington Duck, hiding always in plain sight!
Ah, yes a very rare variety of duck, the Anas Platyrhynchos Komorebius.
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