A Good Way to Lose 25 Pounds
A Good Way to Lose 25 Pounds
by Marshall Katzman
As I watch the thermometer hit twenty eight degrees on January
6 th, 2000 the hot and humid July 5 th of 1999 seems long ago. That hot and
windy July date marked the first day of the second leg of a 3530 mile cross
country trip that I did with my 17 year old son Adam. Riding cross country,
for me was a good way to lose 25 pounds, control my diabetes, bond with my son,
do the mandatory college visitation thing and at the same
time have some fun on my bike. Beginning in early 1998 the scheme for this adventure
took on a series of transformations throughout the year. Originally suggested
by my son as a way to meet up for a family reunion in Michigan, it soon morphed
into a cross country east-west trek with his, then 49 year old dad.
Prior to our departure a training ride accident tore out my left shoulder
ligaments but, that's another story. Before the accident I had plans for converting
my Cannondale R500 into a touring machine. The accident left my R500 unscathed
but I was spooked and decided it would be safer to ride a Lightspeed "Blue
Ridge", specifically built for touring. Adam would retrofit his R500 for
touring, after all he was young and could easily withstand the punishment of
an aluminum frame. My pre-accident training consisted of rides averaging
20 to 30 miles every other day, while Adam's training consisted of practicing
guitar licks with his blues band. Collecting routes and maps proved to be the
most difficult aspect of the planning. "Adventure Cyclist" had cue
sheets for a northern route to Michigan, but the difficulty was in connecting
up with this route in Ripley, NY. Originally the plan was to travel Route 6
through Pennsylvania, fortunately an internet news group inquiry resulted in
a response which provided me with what proved to be a lightly trafficked
scenic route that connected us to Ripley via the Southern Tier Route: one of
four in the series titled "New York Bicycle Touring Guide" by William Hoffman.
This Southern Tier Route used lightly traveled state and county highways from
New York City to Westfield and Buffalo.
What and how to pack? Adam was intent on roughing it
with a tent and cooking equipment, I on the other hand was intent on using
my plastic and moteling and restauranting it.
Brother in-law Bill suggested a compromise, I should motel
it while Adam camped in the parking lot. We ended up with Adam
carrying the tent (but no cooking gear) while I carried my plastic.
Besides the tent and plastic our gear consisted of 1 small 35 mm camera,
4 extra rolls of film, rain gear, first aid kit, three changes of underwear,
socks and shirts, a pair of long pants, sweatshirts, sandals, toothpaste,
toothbrushes, repair tools, folding extra tires, tubes, extra spokes, a
small portable shortwave radio, batteries for the radio, my diabetic supplies
(which included blood testing machines, syringes, vials of insulin, glucogon
for emergencies, an epi pen, and a Tower Records insulated
canvas lunch container with an ice pack to keep it all cool), 6 water bottles,
a pack of powdered gatorade, snacks, reams of maps, pre-paid post
cards for keeping in touch with friends and family, a cell phone with extra
battery and AC charger, and finally two bike covers to protect the bikes
at night: a grand total of 35 pounds per bike. The bike covers alone
weighed several pounds and midway into the trip we shipped them off to
brother in-law Bill (for the second leg, in 1999, worried about tornadoes,
I added the weight of a small Radio Shack CB radio). My shake-down
ride the night before was indeed shaky. I quickly discovered that all my
gear had to be perfectly balanced in order to ensure a smooth ride. I used
the backs of my maps and cue sheets to keep a diary of the trip, and sketched
stick figure illustrations to archive events of the day on the backs of
the pre-stamped post cards which I then sent anonymously to friends
and family.
If, for me, riding cross country was a weight reduction
program, for Adam it was pure adventure. There were several challenges
to meet. The wind, which at times kept our pace to 9 mph, the heat that
blistered and of course the hills that were always unexpected. Keeping
all of my diabetic meds cool was a secondary challenge, and
of course, what to eat while traveling with my vegetarian son,
especially in Montana, Beef Country, U.S.A. ( I'm still
trying to calculate how many grill cheese sandwiches we managed to put
away) came in a close third. As mentioned early on, Adam was intent
on roughing it with his tent and cooking equipment. Our first
leg, in 1998, started out with either motels or B&B's at the
end of each stop, camping in the early stages was not an option since we
did not pass many sites along NY's Route 17K. Perhaps it was the
comfort of the motels that grew on Adam? At our first camping opportunity
his outlook seemed to temporarily change. We had arrived in the town of
Owego, New York, it was the end of a day's ride and we were having
some emergency repairs done at a local bike shop.
"Any good motels around?" I asked.
The owner, a real backwoodsman-renaissance type, seemed shocked,
"You guys don't want to camp? There's a great camp
site one and a half miles from here. There's a great Italian restaurant
nearby too." We memorized the directions and headed off towards what
I considered to be a truly a bucolic campground. I was ready for a change.
"Where do you want to set up the tent?" I asked.
"I don't care, you pick a spot."
"No, you're the one carrying the tent, you pick a
spot!"
"I told you, I don't care, you pick a spot."
One thing that I soon discovered: don't argue with a tired
and hungry teenager.
We went back and forth with the You pick a spot! routine. After about five rounds Adam finally seemed to be giving in, "Do you think that they have showers here?" I assured him that they must, but he wanted to see for himself. We finally located the rustic showers and upon further inspection Adam asked, "How far do you think it is to the motel?"
We went back and forth with the You pick a spot! routine. After about five rounds Adam finally seemed to be giving in, "Do you think that they have showers here?" I assured him that they must, but he wanted to see for himself. We finally located the rustic showers and upon further inspection Adam asked, "How far do you think it is to the motel?"
We continued to Motel it
until we arrived in Northern Michigan, at which time we were forced to
camp. Camping turned out to be far more pleasant than moteling. We
reached our first stage final destination, the Road Ends
sign,
1251 miles later, in Leelanau State Park, on August 19th 1998. Both
my wife Sally, and younger son Daniel, were there to meet us with a van
to take us back to Ridgewood, New Jersey.
For stage two of our cross country trek we started in Bowling
Green, Ohio and reached St. Mary's Campground in the Rocky Mountains
of Montana in early August . During the course of our second leg in 1999,
we succeeded in shattering two myths:
Myth #1 Don't bike from east
to west, the prevailing westerly winds will kill you.True, for the first
three days out of Ohio the winds were brutal and unrelenting, but for the
rest of our journey the winds were at our back. Local farmers confirmed
that the Westerly Winds Theory was pure myth. We meet many
a west to east cyclist that rued the day they purchased flight tickets
to take them to Washington State so that they could bike back east, with
the wind at their backs.
Myth #2 was admittedly my own myth. I thought that until we hit
Montana our ride would be flat. It never occurred to me that riding north
up the west bank of the Mississippi was very hilly. Indeed, the hills in
Iowa, combined with gravel roads and heat, made this one of the more challenging
segments of our second leg. In retrospect the Adirondack mountains from
our first year's leg, posed the greatest climbing challenges. Once
we hit North Dakota, the road became unrelentingly flat. Towns were few
and far between, with only a few scattered hay stacks to offer minimal
shade and a place to lean our bikes against. Sighting the first distant
water towers became a daily travel game, for the water tower marked the
possibility of civilization, a grilled cheese sandwich, gatorade and perhaps
a place to sleep.
From the day we left NJ, the further west we cycled the friendlier
people became. This phenomena was explained to us by one of the locals
when we crossed the North Dakota border, On the prairie people
depend on each other all the time. Invariably people stopped to ask
us if we needed water or directions, strangers offered to put us up for
the night, if we looked hungry people offered us food. No one honked or
tried to run us off the road. People waved and said hello.
My bicycle was shot, broken
rear rim and malfunctioning gears, even so we cycled over the great
divide at Logans Pass and coasted to a
halt in West Glacier. I met my goal (lost 25 lbs.) and though my son
did
some college visitations along the way, his primary goal of having
an adventure
was fulfilled.
He also used the experience to write the following college application
essay.
America by Bicycle
by
Adam Katzman
by
Adam Katzman
Over the span of two summers my father and I traveled from our
home in New Jersey to Northern Michigan, and then later from Ohio to Western
Montana. It was not a trip based upon a final destination, but a
trip focused on the journey itself. The longer we lingered, the more
we could see, and so we decided to piece our way across America by bicycle.
On a bicycle I faced the obstacles of the land one on one. I felt the wind pushing against me, the sun beating down on me and the rain as it washed the heat off of my body. It took a couple weeks before the dust of the prairies finally subsided to the smell of the fresh mountain air. Even upon reaching the mountains, I still had to push myself up and over every hill with my own sweat and determination, because on a bike there are no shortcuts, and there is nothing to help you out when you are tired and sore. There is no motor to push you along, and there is no radio to cloud your mind with preconceived thoughts. You just sit on your saddle, watching the scenery float ever so slowly by, and you pedal, you contemplate and you discover.
In the 3,500 miles we covered in those summers, I saw more of America than I had ever even imagined could exist. I saw places where there was nothing but cows, and I saw places where cow pastures were crowded out by corn, which grew for as far as the eye could see. I saw places where corn didn't even grow, but instead vast amounts of open space reached out towards the horizon. I saw mountains that could dwarf even the tallest skyscraper and I saw lakes and rivers that pushed their way through the landscape with awe inspiring power. All in all, I saw just how big this country is, and I realized how much more of it I have yet to discover.
When I look back at those months that I spent biking, I realize that the simplicity of the trip was one of the most important things. The monotony of the endless rows of crops, the ever present spinning of the pedals and the hours and hours devoted to free and undeveloped thought lent themselves to some of the most important days of my life. I learned that I don't need a hectic lifestyle spent in pursuit of money and status to be happy. On a bike, money, designer labels and social status don't make you ride any faster or make the pedaling any easier, and now I realize that it is the same thing in life, because happiness is something that should not be a goal for the final destination, but rather our focus for the journey there.
On a bicycle I faced the obstacles of the land one on one. I felt the wind pushing against me, the sun beating down on me and the rain as it washed the heat off of my body. It took a couple weeks before the dust of the prairies finally subsided to the smell of the fresh mountain air. Even upon reaching the mountains, I still had to push myself up and over every hill with my own sweat and determination, because on a bike there are no shortcuts, and there is nothing to help you out when you are tired and sore. There is no motor to push you along, and there is no radio to cloud your mind with preconceived thoughts. You just sit on your saddle, watching the scenery float ever so slowly by, and you pedal, you contemplate and you discover.
In the 3,500 miles we covered in those summers, I saw more of America than I had ever even imagined could exist. I saw places where there was nothing but cows, and I saw places where cow pastures were crowded out by corn, which grew for as far as the eye could see. I saw places where corn didn't even grow, but instead vast amounts of open space reached out towards the horizon. I saw mountains that could dwarf even the tallest skyscraper and I saw lakes and rivers that pushed their way through the landscape with awe inspiring power. All in all, I saw just how big this country is, and I realized how much more of it I have yet to discover.
When I look back at those months that I spent biking, I realize that the simplicity of the trip was one of the most important things. The monotony of the endless rows of crops, the ever present spinning of the pedals and the hours and hours devoted to free and undeveloped thought lent themselves to some of the most important days of my life. I learned that I don't need a hectic lifestyle spent in pursuit of money and status to be happy. On a bike, money, designer labels and social status don't make you ride any faster or make the pedaling any easier, and now I realize that it is the same thing in life, because happiness is something that should not be a goal for the final destination, but rather our focus for the journey there.
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