The lake at the old Mitchell Sand Pits. |
Now watch......it will snow in May! I called it here first!
Anyway, I was itching for a ride, but with forecast gusts of wind up into the mid-30's mph, I thought better of that gravel route idea and decided to stick to an in-town route to stay out of the open countryside. Good thing too because I was getting pushed around while riding as it was in town. I cannot imagine it would have been any fun out in the country.
So, I decided to ride this little gravelly-dirt path around the Mitchell Sand Pit lake. Technically it is called 'Harold Getty Lake', but no one around here uses that name for it. In fact, I had to Google the place to find the name under "Mitchell Sand Pits", so even Google goes by that, it would seem.
Anyway....
I think I may have roached my rear brake pad on this ride. |
On the way over I had to get around the construction for the 11th Street Bridge which has blocked the bicycle trail going underneath its approach. I carefully went down the steep dike which the bike path is routed on top of there. I did a fine job controlling my brakes on the way down, and I went on my merry way.
What I did not know was that this challenging braking situation must have done some damage to the rear caliper or the pads. I didn't really even have to use the brakes much at all until I was well into the path loop around that lake with the fancy-pants man's name. At the point where I would have been traversing the East end of the dam, I suddenly saw a line across my sight which was orange. In a split second, I had to decide if this was on the ground or up in the air, and a panic-braking situation ensued where I found out that I had not much rear brake anymore, but a ton of front brake, as usual.
This meant that I instinctively pulled the rear brake, as I know that jamming on the front means a quick ejection over the bars. But when I felt nothing out of the rear brake, as I was used to, I had to grab a handful of front brake just to dump off speed, and to miss what I now perceived as a bar about five feet above the trail. Then because of the "delay" in scrubbing speed, I ended up doing a "fancy dismount" anyway. No harm. No foul. Just a slightly displaced right front lever, which was easy to bang back into place.
I then went on with thoughts of what may have gone wrong with my rear brake. I still had a rear brake, but the lever travel was a LOT more than it had been when I started out. So, my thoughts are (a) replace the pads and see if I maybe had a pad failure (cheap option, easy to do, makes sense due to component age) or bleed the brakes, (makes more sense, hasn't been done ever, and is harder to do). Meanwhile I am heading out of the Mitchel Sand Pits area and I decided to stop for a second and grab the image of my bike above. I just happened to look at my Apple Watch and then I see the "no cell phone connection" icon. Wait! What?
Scene of the "yard sale". Apparently there were no customers on this day. |
Suddenly I realized that I must have dumped the contents of my magnetically closed top tube bag when I dumped my bike. Whoa! Had I not noticed that icon on my watch, I may have gotten all the way back home before I realized what had happened.
I raced back to the scene of my fancy dismount and there it was. Gleaming in the Sun was an iPhone, my tire levers, and a patch kit. Good thing the park was not busy! And, for once, technology actually saves the day. By the way, I will be ordering a proper top tube bag for this bike soon. No more magnetic closures!
Figuring I had drained my Cup of Good Luck for the day, I headed home. It was good to be out in the Sun with no coat, or any Winter gear at all. This will not last though. Just wait until the weekend.....
2 comments:
Greets GT, the way lives depend on the “phone” now, seems a wireless-safety would be installed like on small watercraft should you or your phone fall overboard. Also, is the 5’ high metal rod still across the trail😗?
@Skidmark - I guess the "wireless safety" is my Apple Watch, in a manner of speaking, since the watch has a "find my phone" function that sets off an audible signal from the phone if you are in range of it. Not ideal if you are as far away as I was at first, but it would pinpoint an exact location once you were in the general area.
And yes, as far as I know, that bar is right where I found it yet. Bad deal. At the least they could have tied some flags to it to make it more noticeable and give someone a sense of height to it.
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