Thursday, May 15, 2014

With only 1 month to go: Bicycle Blog Reduex: Saddle Sores and Coasting Chores (07-10-2013)

With only one month to until departure, I thought I'd post my old bicycle blogs that began this whole adventure but never saw the light of day on "Perfect Circles." So, please enjoy them and keep in mind they are from 2012 and 2013. This is 5 of 5:


Bicycle Blog Reduex: Saddle Sores and Coasting Chores

Okay, let’s try this again. This, figuratively speaking, is a new year. Sorry to disappoint, but this is not written from the road. That’s right, due to reasons that will make themselves known soon, I did not leave for my trip this summer. On May the Fourth (be with you), I finally made a purchase of a Fuji Touring Bicycle from a small bike shop in Sherwood. Since then, I have clocked almost 400 miles on it. Things have not always been easy, however, but with time come new strategies and different challenges. Last month I took a bike class to learn how to change a flat. Changing a flat and other common road ailments will take practice and will be more comfortable over time. Slowly but surely I have learned about my new bicycle and have begun to purchase needed tools and supplies for my upcoming tour. I still need to purchase a pair of rear panniers and flasher and lights and other necessities, but in time, they will come my way. In the meantime, I will clock more and more miles on two wheels.

That all being said, my hope and prayer is that I will be allowed to embark on my two wheel trek summer 2014. I am not yet sure how long a trip I wish to do. It could be anywhere from a couple weeks to a few months. Time will tell. As referred to above, there is a lot of preparation to do before then. That includes, purchasing needed supplies and writing up a tentative trip itinerary. I may set some deadlines for myself so I can accomplish these things in a due time. I may report more on this stuff at a later date. But until that time, ride safely and carry a big stick!

As was said in a previous entry:


“The freedom and solitary of such a pursuit will be extraordinary to say the least. As will the obstacles and unknown 
trials
. I look forward to the months ahead as this time creeps closer. Things to look for in upcoming bicycle blogs include: a final destination guide, a bicycle purchased, a travel book plan, reasons for taking such a trip, a rough itinerary, and more.”

(**First written & published on July 10, 2013**)

With only 1 month to go: Bicycle Blog #4 - New Year, New Things (01-01-2013)

With only one month to until departure, I thought I'd post my old bicycle blogs that began this whole adventure but never saw the light of day on "Perfect Circles." So, please enjoy them and keep in mind they are from 2012 and 2013. This is 4 of 5:


Bicycle Blog #4 – New Year, New Things

As the year two thousand thirteen is upon us, it is the natural time for new beginnings. With the New Year come new challenges as well as old nuisances. But, it’s just as well. I can taste adventure. I can smell the aroma of the road. I can only hope that my plans will come together and that a new bicycle will find its way into my lap soon and very soon.

Saturdays of the New Year will be my day for bicycle planning/shopping. One of the things I have been doing lately is figuring out how to balance my life in 2013 given my schedule. Things such as church activities, work, exercise, camp planning, bicycle planning, reading, writing a novel…all have there place…or at least should. Balance is a very difficult thing and some are better at it than others. That being said, on Saturdays I plan to do somebike riding, mapping my routes, spending time online, in articles, in books, asking advice to configure out all the logistics that I need to understand. I will do my best to keep you updated (whoever “you” is…there’s never a good way to know who reads these things).

Okay, where will I ride? Previously I had mentioned that I had narrowed it down to two routes. One as a Northern route through British Columbia and the other was a Southern route down the coast of California. With much deliberation and thought, I am leaning towards heading south…possibly all the way to the Grand Canyon via Nevada (or on the way back). I have never been to Nevada so that will be cool. I really do want to do the Northern route I mentioned, but right now I think I want some more tours under my belt before I take on the great Canadian Rockies in the frozen north. Logistics come into play too, such as the exchange rate, etc. I am not ruling any ride out at the moment, but I am just leaning more and more towards heading south. I have 11 weeks and I know I don’t have to do a huge tour taking up my whole summer. I could do a 2 week trip or something small like that, but knowing me I like to think big. So, we will see what happens, shall we? Will you take this journey with me?

One last note: I have thought of doing this trip alone, but if there is anyone who would desire to do any leg of the journey with me, I will not turn you away. My guess is there will not be many people jumping at that invitation, but let’s just say that it is an invitation…take it or leave it.

More details to come.


Anyhow, talk to you in February…

(**First written & published on January 1, 2013**)

With only 1 month to go: Bicycle Blog #3 (11-04-2012)

With only one month to until departure, I thought I'd post my old bicycle blogs that began this whole adventure but never saw the light of day on "Perfect Circles." So, please enjoy them and keep in mind they are from 2012 and 2013. This is 3 of 5:


Bicycle Blog #3

The sun has emerged in this eleventh month and in a little while I will embark on a bike ride to the library to return some audio books. I can’t really pass up this time to enjoy the outdoors especially since I know that they are going to be far and in between for the next several months. Daylight savings time snuck up on me like a lizard upon a tiger. Yes, we get an extra hour of sleep or something like that, but the days get shorter and darkness approaches quickly. That is not pleasant to some and I am one of those “some.” Alas, life goes on as it has this past week. I find it hard to believe it is already the month of November. Where did the last two months go? As the saying goes, “Time’s fun when you’re having flies.” Wait…reverse that. Thanksgiving will be here before I know it which will merge into Christmas and the New Year. And before I can say “bike trip,” I will be doing just that…Lord willing. Being the first part of November, I no longer have nine months, but seven until I depart for my grand adventure on two wheels.

Seven months! A lot can and will happen in those seven months. I do regret that I don’t have a lot to report at this moment. In fact, I have not even decided on a destination for said trip. I am leaning more and more towards the Canadian option. However, that will offer more challenges and obstacles to overcome. For example, currency exchange, communication with my home-based navigator (my current cell phone cannot be used abroad and phone booths are hard to come by), long stretches between towns, and extreme weather and temperatures. Most of this is speculation and of course no matter where I decide to go, there will be challenges and for that I am grateful. There will be pros and cons no matter where I end up traveling. I do hope to document my travels and compile my journals and experiences into a short travel book. There will be more on that later.

I continue to exercise and keep in shape. However, I need not worry too much about being in perfect shape come June 16th because I have 
complete
 faith that the tour will train me rather than me for the tour. Nevertheless, I ought to get my mind ready for such an endeavor. Within the next two to three months I hope to acquire a new touring bicycle. That will mean I need to get my act together and set up a further plan to accomplish that so I have enough time to train and break my new bike in for my adventure.

The freedom and solitary of such a pursuit will be extraordinary to say the least. As will the obstacles and unknown trials. I look forward to the months ahead as this time creeps closer. Things to look for in upcoming bicycle blogs include: a final destination guide, a bicycle purchased, a travel book plan, reasons for taking such a trip, a rough itinerary, and more.


Happy pursuits

(**First written & published on November 4, 2012**)

With only 1 month to go: Bicycle Blog #2: When I ride, I feel His pleasure (10-01-2012)

With only one month to until departure, I thought I'd post my old bicycle blogs that began this whole adventure but never saw the light of day on "Perfect Circles." So, please enjoy them and keep in mind they are from 2012 and 2013. This is 2 of 5:


Bicycle Blog #2: When I ride, I feel His pleasure

Today is October 1st and Fall is well under way, technically speaking. The weather is still great bicycling weather and for that I am grateful. I brought my 15-year-old bicycle to my apartment a few weeks ago, dusted it off, pumped up the tires, lubed the chain after wiping it down and adjusted the seat. After doing such things, I did not expect what happened next: a smooth ride. That day, a few weeks ago, I rode 20 miles. Regardless to say, I exercised some muscles that I forgot existed. As I rode to Spong’s Landing Park and through downtown, I could not help but feel free. With the wind in my face, I breathed a sigh of relief. When I ride, I feel His pleasure.

When I hear people say that they are ready for rain, I cringe and think, “I am not.” That willmean I will have to walk, run and bike in the rain. I know that day will come and by “day” I mean “months and months.” But that will not stop me. I cannot let it stop. That day, when the rain will come, non-Oregonians will take out their umbrellas like they are afraid of thewet droplets like they are acid and if they make contact with the skin or their clothes, something awful will happen. The dedicated, and the living will ride, golf, run, play, splash, walk, dance, and jump in the outdoors. It always astonishes me that when I walk through a popular park like Riverfront on a hot sunny day, the park is crowded and the next day at the same time, when one cloud is in the sky, the park is close to deserted. It astonishes me but I am also grateful for it because the crowds are diminished for people like me who are unafraid of clouds or cold or wet or the elements that God has blessed us with. Therefore, I will walk, I will run, I will ride, I will play and when I get wet or cold, I will 
press
on and know that a hot cup of hot chocolate or coffee or something is waiting for me. But that cold wet day has not come yet, but I am just waiting in anticipation.

I look forward to the day I do purchase a touring bicycle. However, my old bike will suffice as a commuter in the meantime. It is by no means long-ride worthy, but around town it works great. The chain still grinds sometimes and the handle bars are sticky, but I can rest assured that for now I don’t have to put money towards a tune-up or replacement parts. For cross training, I have been walking about 4-5 miles a day which I hope to turn into part-jogs/runs in the future if my body will allow it. I have also been doing my best to eat healthier…fruits and veggies, etc. and cutting back the calories. I have lost about 14 lbs since this time last year. Just to be clear, though it is something I need to do bit by bit, it is not my goal to lose weight. My primary goal is to live a healthier lifestyle and get/keep in shape…especially since I am planning a 11-week bicycle journey. But always keep in mind, “Train for the tour or the tour trains you.”

Here’s to an active October…get out and do something fun or new…sleep on a hill, swim in a lake or river…sleep under the stars…start listening to Christmas music…oh snap!


When I ride, I feel His pleasure…

(**First written & published on October 1, 2012**)

With only 1 month to go: Bicycle Blog #1 - the Beginning (09-06-2012)

With only one month to until departure, I thought I'd post my old bicycle blogs that began this whole adventure but never saw the light of day on "Perfect Circles." So, please enjoy them and keep in mind they are from 2012 and 2013. This is 1 of 5:


Bicycle Blog #1 – the Beginning

Bicycle Fever – It has struck me. To ease the confusion, I am talking about a mental sickness that strikes a once-avid cyclist that has gone a year with no bicycle interaction of any kind. My last good ride was in Houston, Texas during the first half of Summer 2011. I had a great time down there exploring different parks and dodging the often profane motorists who view bicycles as an oddity. Since then, my bicycle sat idle on the back of my car in the Yuma, Arizona sun before making its way up to Oregon where it is still sitting in my parent’s garage. To tell the whole truth, I did actually take it out for a spin once with my Dad last fall, only to discover the ailments my poor bicycle has endured. The chain is rusted and the gears make less than smooth shifting transitions making it very difficult to ride uphill. So, it sits collecting cobwebs and dust. It is sad because since I was 14, my specialized rock hopper has been a part of my family with well over 4,000 miles under its tires and logged onto its two computers. It has traveled in British Columbia thrice, along the Oregon Coast once, up to Seattle, Washington, around Redding, California, on a few rides in Indiana, around Lake Sammamish in Bellevue, WA and countless rides in the Willamette Valley.

I long to take it down from its hook, but I must face reality. And that reality is: I need a new bicycle. I am not sure this bike would hold up on another extended tour. I am seeking a new bike suitable for commuting around town as well as for touring. I have searched some on craigslist but to no avail…yet. I must confess I have not committed as much time as I would like to find a new or used bicycle. Nowadays bicycles can cost anywhere from a couple hundred dollars to upwards of four thousand. It all depends on what I am looking for. Obviously I am not willing or able to spend four thousand dollars on a new bicycle. That being said, I am open to even a used bike. That’s why craigslist can be a great tool. If you or someone you know can 
offer
 any suggestions or advice on purchasing a bicycle, please let me know! Later this weekend, I do plan on going to one of our local bicycle shops to get sized for a bike so I know what sizing I need to be looking for. Otherwise I am kind of shooting in the dark. While I am there, I may tell them what I would like in a bike and what I am going to use it for in hopes that they can offer some suggestions and much-needed advice. From there, I can move on to my next stage of bicycle searching.

With all that being said, I really do miss cycling. Jealousy overwhelms me whenever I see a bicyclist ride by me. I must clarify however. I am only jealous of the ones who look and ride like cyclists. Because let’s be real…most people I see riding a bike in this city break all sorts of laws and don’t care about anyone around them. I’ve even seen bicycle police officers break laws (i.e. riding on sidewalks, riding in the wrong direction, riding without a helmet – which is not a law given the age, but it should be because it is stupid not to wear a helmet, etc.). Regardless, I miss cycling a lot and wish I could join them on a decent road-ready bicycle, especially in the beautiful weather we’ve been having. My day will come, hopefully sooner than later! I am assured of this.

Let’s state the facts: I need a new bicycle, I miss cycling and the third fact is that I am planning, as of this week, an 11-week bicycle adventure next summer. It is only a tentative plan as of now because, as a person living life, I know things have a tendency to change. Obviously, step one for me is to find a new bicycle suitable for touring. But that has not stopped me from exploring some potential routes. Where do I want to go? I have eleven weeks (77 days). Even with an average of 50 miles a day, I could ride 3000 miles with 17 extra days. As the saying goes, “the possibilities are endless.” Well, yes and no. I have to narrow it down somehow. I have always enjoyed door-to-door tours. That will cut out any airfare or additional travel expenses. But that limits me to the west or at least in and around the area, because I have 77 days to reach my destination and return home. There’s always that return journey to keep in mind. So, the following are potential routes I have briefly thought about:

  1. NORTH – Washington, Vancouver Island, Sunshine CoastInside Passage to Prince Rupert (with a possible extension to Alaska), across to Prince George and loop around back home.
  2. SOUTH – California, Redwoods, San Francisco, Pacific Coast, San Diego and loop around back home possibly through the Sierra Nevada.
  3. EAST – Idaho, Wyoming and Colorado and loop around back home via Utah.
  4. NATIONAL PARK TOUR – Olympic, North Cascades (via maybe Victoria, BC), Glacier, Yellowstone and Grand Teton and loop around back home.
  5. SOMETHING ELSE

Currently those are my options. In the next 9.5 months I could easily find a new route to do. But as of now, these are my options. And actually, I am leaning more towards NORTH or SOUTH, cold or hot. Those two appeal to me the most for various reasons.

Well, there you have it. As the months role on, more bicycle blogs will be written and more insight into my bicycle mind and the reasons behind this may or may not be revealed…


“Train for the tour or the tour trains you.”

(**First written & published on September 6, 2012**)

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

"You cannot travel down the path before you have become the Path itself"


So it’s May 13th 2014 and I’m about to take on a trip I’ve been wanting to accomplish for a very long time. For years I’ve delayed due to various life happenings and comforts, but I’ve finally said it’s time and northing will get in the way to hold me back. So, holding my breath, here I go. Speaking of "nothing holding me back," my retired friend from Texas will no longer offer support. Therefore, I must resort to solo means as previously mentioned in another blog. So, sadly he will no longer arrive in town on the 14th of June. However, I would still like to “Send Off” BBQ in the park to all those who wish to attend on that day (more on that later). On June 15th I will then pack up and drive (someone will drive me) to Port Angeles, WA where I will set up camp and explore Olympic National Park before the real fun begins the following day. And on that day I will make my way towards the coast and begin heading south. I will ride down through the mighty Redwoods of California arriving in San Francisco hopefully on or near July 4th. This will be my first real rest day. From the Bay area I will continue on Highway 1 until I make it to the Mexican Border. This will be the turning point. Now my road lies northbound, meandering through the Mojave Desert and the Sierra Nevada Mountains as I take in the glorious landscapes of such National Parks as Joshua Tree, King’s Canyon, Sequoia and Yosemite. Lake Tahoe will be a check point before I make my last leg of the journey into my home state of Oregon. My brief ride through Nevada will mark the 30th state I have visited. Once in Oregon I will visit Crater Lake and ride around the rim drive before heading to Bend and the Three Sisters Wilderness and back to my home turf of the Willamette Valley. In total it should be somewhere in the vicinity of 3,500 grueling and awe-inspiring miles.

I will now ask you to please remove your hand from scratching your head and asking yourself, "Why?" Rest assured, I am not a crazy person. I am a person seeking life, seeking experience and seeking memories and seeking a dream. Why would anyone want to just pedal around the West Coast, through the hottest part of the country in the hottest part of the year, up steep mountains and down an endless shoreline? Well there are many ways you can answer this question. For one, adventure, to live an adventure. However, the simple answer is this: To raise awareness and funds for the start of a bicycle adventure ministry/Christian camp. This trip is kind of like my guinea pig. I am new to fundraising and it shows: having raised $20.00 in 250 days. Awesome. I’m not sure if that’s a reflection on me as a fundraiser or others as not caring. God will provide if it be his will I like to think. My plan is to simply ride and meet people and seek out opportunities in which God will lead me to open up at churches, camps, campgrounds, cities, parks or monuments. How conversations begin and end about my dream of beginning a Christian camp I will put into His hands and who knows what will come of them. A simple donation of any dollar amount or contribution can go a very long way.


Thank you for reading.

“You cannot travel down the path before you have become the Path itself”

-Gautama Buddha

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Perfect Circles: a Bicycle Adventure Ministry

“Let’s talk about this thing called Perfect Circles.”

The idea behind Perfect Circles began in the north woods of Wisconsin. I was working on a dream camp project called Camp Jehovah-Shammah which in Hebrew means, “The LORD is there.” The following will provide you with an overview of such a program:

Perfect Circles: a bicycle adventure ministry of Camp Jehovah-Shammah
“If only I may finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me, the task of testifying to the Gospel of God’s grace” (Acts 20:24).

Purpose/Program: Perfect Circles is an educational travel program promoting personal growth, adventure, and fun through cycling and camping. It is a bicycle adventure program that focuses on the communion we have with one another through the close bond of Jesus Christ. The mission of Perfect Circles is to provide a community of cyclists who band together to worship God and have fellowship in Jesus Christ on the open road.

Can You Imagine Yourself…….
--missing your turn and ending up right where you started from that morning
--being outwitted by a hungry raccoon, and having to cycle to town for breakfast
--asking directions in a foreign country using only sign language
--being on a trip with a 24-hour off tune whistler
--eating chili for dinner after having spent a lifetime refusing it
--sleeping in a tent with someone who snores
--spending a night in a farmhouse and being awakened before the crack of dawn to tend to the morning chores
--sharing the last cookie, even though you wanted all of it
…. AND LIKING IT!

Our Groups
While the scenery you pass may be spectacular, and the physical exercise invigorating, your experience as part of a group will probably be the highlight of your trip. You may be surprised how close you'll feel to friends who were new faces just a few days before. You'll be traveling with 8 - 12 people and 2 leaders on a low budget and a high sense of adventure. In a small group each person adds his or her own flavor: one person may be a great storyteller while another a gourmet campfire cook. Ideas and input are also essential; each individual’s contribution enhances the group as a whole.

Flexibility and cooperation are key elements in our group experience. A lot of give and take is needed to make a group run smoothly -- like when there are nine or ten different opinions, or when one bike breakdown holds everyone up for the day! It is important to be open to the ideas, experiences and feelings of other group members, and to be willing to abide by group decisions. You will have your share of hostel/campsite chores, and food and group equipment to carry. The richness of experiencing cooperative group living and self-sufficiency is one of the added dimensions which make Perfect Circles trips much more than just a few weeks on your bike.

Our Leaders
If you want a bike trip leader who will cook your breakfast and fix your flat tires, look elsewhere. Our leaders provide the ingredients and tools, but they'll encourage you to tackle the job on your own. They're fun to be with, and when times get rough their warmth, strength, and guidance will help bring the group together.

Our leaders are teachers, human service professionals, graduate students, college seniors, and travel/hospitality professionals. Each leader has been carefully chosen and trained by our Leadership Department and is required to successfully complete a personal interview, a CPR & First Aid certification program, and participate in our Leadership Training and Evaluation Course. Each course is run as an actual biking, camping, hostelling trip. Emphasis is placed on the skills necessary in leading a trip such as group dynamics, first aid, bike repairs, camping skills, hostel customs, environmental awareness, meal planning, games and sensitivity exercises.

Safety
A fun biking experience requires that biking safety precautions are practiced. Our leaders are fully trained in bicycle safety. Trippers will wear bike helmets at all times, perform daily pre-ride bike inspections, and practice safe cycling.

Equipment
Each tripper will need to bring a touring or hybrid bicycle with 10-24 speeds, saddlebags, a sleeping bag, a foam mattress, and a helmet. Included in the trip cost is the rental of tents and camping cook set/stove.    

Overnights   
Some of our treks stay more at hostels; others camp out every night, while many do a mixture of both.

Hostelling
Hostels are simple, inexpensive accommodations supervised by house-parents. Old farmhouses, schools, former jails, abandoned coast guard stations, ships, castles and trains have been converted into hostels. Most have a kitchen, a common room and dorms with bunk beds. Mattresses, pillows, sheets, and blankets are provided. Hostels are cooperative accommodations; you are expected to clean up and help with small chores. You'll enjoy running into other travelers staying at the same hostel, exchanging stories and sharing experiences with them.

Camping   
With the ground as your bed and the tent as your roof, camping can be a fun and exciting experience. You become aware of the sounds and smells of the night with the stars (and sometimes the bugs) all around you. Our groups often stay in state forests and private campgrounds. Facilities vary. Some campgrounds have showers, pools and recreation rooms, while others offer only a field in which to pitch a tent. We provide each camping group with tents, stoves and cook sets. Trippers must provide their own personal equipment, such as sleeping bags, cutlery and dishes. Camping requires added physical and emotional effort, especially when the sky looks ominous. However, evenings around the campfire give trippers a chance to know one another better and experience a special closeness as a group.

A Typical Day
Depending on circumstances, you'll crawl out of your sleeping bag or bed between 7:00 and 9:00 A.M. (perhaps earlier at times). You'll help get breakfast and clean up the hostel or campsite and pack your bike. The group will go over the route and arrange meeting places along the way for swimming, lunch, whatever.  Each person cycles at his or her own speed, with a leader bringing up the rear. Frequent stops are made for ice-cream, swimming, resting at the tops of hills, talking with local sheep, etc. The group regroups at or near the final destination to arrange for grocery shopping and dinner. The evening's activities can be planned ahead, or left open to the spontaneity of the moment. On planned trips your overnights will be spent in hostels which are cooperative, dormitory style accommodations, or state parks and local campgrounds; some trips are either all hostelling or all camping while many offer a mixture of both. A few trips will spend the night in college dorms, country inns, or farmhouses. On trips with phantom overnights (stealth camping), groups often stay in farmer's fields, back-yards, churches and firehouses as well as regular campgrounds.

Daily Cycling
The wind in your face, the sun on your back, the sense of accomplishment at the end of a long day--these are all part of the special feeling you have when riding. Cycling is much more than physical exercise. You'll become close friends with your bicycle as the two of you get to know a region the way no motorist can. People are pleased to see you taking the time and energy to explore the landscape and culture of their particular region.

Cycling also means traveling under your own steam, pollution-free, carrying your essentials with you every pedal of the way. Of course there will be days when the weather is less than perfect or times when bike repairs slow you down, but the experiences you have along the way make it all worthwhile. If this sounds enticing but you're not an Olympic champion, don't worry. We are a summer camp biking program offering a variety of trips for all ranges of cycling ability.

Trips would begin locally and as God wills it, expand globally. My dream as Camp Jehovah-Shammah may begin in the form of Perfect Circles bicycle trips. I anticipate the very first trip to be a week long summer excursion. As I build a clientele and raise awareness and funds and support, the following year will see additional trips. And perhaps the week of Spring Break will be available for a trip as well, or maybe winter journeys during Christmas break. The possibilities are endless. There are many trips and expeditions that would be feasible just in and around the Pacific Northwest.

This expedition this summer down the Pacific Coast and up through the desert and mountains I anticipate to be the first in a series of expeditions to raise awareness and funds and to scope out locations to be able to start a Christian ministry called Perfect Circles. There are obviously many logistics to think about and research before the first camp happens (i.e. support, bikes, first aid, leaders, training, fundraising, equipment, routes, etc.) but that is all apart of the fun. However, I cannot do this alone. I ask for support.

Again, let me direct you to my fundraising website:


Help this dream come true.


Thank you all kindly.

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

SOLO

This blog is about being SOLO. As of this week, I will be traveling solo on my grand bicycle adventure down the Pacific Coast and up through the desert and mountains. 3500 miles. For varied reasons, my support vehicle has pulled out of the trip and can no longer accompany me. This news came to me with six weeks left to go. For the past year I have been planning, purchasing and anticipating this trip in light of having a support vehicle. However, the tables have turned now and I must reconfigure some things and make due with what I have. I must scramble with the weeks I have left on top of all my other duties and responsibilities.

Now, more than ever do I need support and prayer. My bike will be heavier, many things I cannot bring due to limited space and places to go and things to do may be more difficult. I was not expecting this news to reach me. I joked about it months ago but I never thought it would turn into reality. However, it has and I must not dwell on my vehicle-support loss. I must press on and do this trip whether I am ready or not. Wild camping may be difficult as will internet access to find warm showers. When I am injured or in a health crisis, I must stay calm and keep my wits about me to determine what's next.

This will be a solo journey but I believe I will cherish all the experiences, memories and dialogues. I definitely need this trip to unwind due to some undesirable news at work. This has not been my week for good news. What will tomorrow hold I wonder? I tend to worry too much and dwell on things which eats up the insides. I need to relax and gather my wits and strength and move on. It's easy to say rather than do. But bicycling is really a great way to blow off some steam and vent to the air and passing car traffic, and believe me, there will be plenty of that. Just last week I posted that I was feel anxiety about the start of this trip, but now even more so because I will not have a companion. As he recently reminded me, sometimes God or life doesn't give us advance notices. Well, true...I must take that as I will, though I feel dejected, but not defeated. I must press on towards the goal. Although, I will miss having conversations around the campfire...who will take me in? www.warmshowers.org anyone?

Sometimes I feel as though I am living my life in solo gear. Sometimes I wonder where all my friends have gone. No one seems willing to offer much support. I have encountered the same thing every year for the past 8 when talking about starting a camp. No one seems willing to get their hands dirty, but they are so quick to say, "I'll pray for you," (which is not bad, I just think it is an overused phrase that doesn't hold a lot of weight) or "I'd support you if I could." Really? Facebook for instance, is not a social network giant, but rather a dejected waste of time and energy and space. Someone posts a photo or a video of a cat doing the can-can and it instantly goes viral or some absurd gossip about the immature criminal Justin Bieber and everyone cares or "likes" it. But someone who asks for support for a worthy cause or someone who desires to start a camp on limited funds or fund a bike journey to get that camp started...gets 0 hits, like it really wasn't posted in the first place. I think many people are afraid to part with their precious coins or are afraid of where it will go to. I will say it again, I will not be defeated. I will press on, with support or no support. Adventure will happen...

Where are my friends with adventure sense?

Solo I journey and solo I will return.

Sunday, May 4, 2014

"The bicycle is the noblest invention of mankind"

May the Fourth be with you...

On May 4th, 2013 (one year ago today) I purchased my Fuji Touring Bicycle from a bicycle shop in Sherwood. Since then I have clocked over 3,000 miles (as of a few days ago) which includes commuting to work, church and all over town, bike events and training days. This is small compared to what I hope to accomplish in the coming months. From June 15th to August 30th I hope to ride another 3500 miles, more than I have ridden in the last 12 months. Can I do it? Will I do it? Six weeks to go...only time will tell. This trip will arrive whether I am ready or not. Whether I am ready or not really doesn't matter at this point. What does matter is that adventure lies down the road and within the equation of adventure is misery and heartache. But around the bend, over the hill, atop the summit, down the road lies a sunset, a sandwich, a beautiful sight, a cold glass of water, an amazing picture of Creation...

I pray for this future; I pray for my survival. I pray for my growth and my sanity. I pray for my mind and my will. I do not view this as a chessboard. So I must prove it and get out of here alive. There are some sketchy patches of road and I must overcome and get through to the other side.

Thoughts keep flowing from me and anxiety seems to dominate my thoughts at times. But for what? “Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?" Hmm...and that is an encouraging thought.

As Gandalf said in The Fellowship of the Ring: "So do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us. There are other forces at work in this world, Frodo, besides the will of evil. Bilbo was meant to find the Ring, in which case you also were meant to have it. And that is an encouraging thought."

So I was meant to follow this path. I cannot accomplish such a task, embark on such an adventure without the support of my friends and family. So please, if nothing else, lend me your prayers. Alas, lend God your prayers on my behalf.

Pray for my health (no dizziness and headaches) and strength.
Pray for my safety.
Pray for my sanity.
Pray for my mind and mental strength.
Pray for my Spiritual walk that I may not stray on such a journey far from home.
Pray also for my support wagon and our companionship.
Pray that God will be at the helm of my bicycle the whole way and pray that He will bring what He will from this trip and if it be His will to bring anything of this trip in the form of fundraising/awareness of a Christian camp.
Pray that I will forget my troubles and have fun!
Pray for my bicycle...

After all...

"The bicycle is the noblest invention of mankind." - William Saroyan

May the Fourth be with you all...