(10-09-2022, 08:31 PM)bluesbreaker Wrote: My bucket list ride is along the beach in Florida!
On most of the Florida coastline roadway you can't even see the ocean. I would like to try the East Coast Greenway. Some of it tours the Florida coast and other parts of the eastern seaboard to the mountains. They are always opening new segments to join Maine to Florida.
(10-13-2022, 08:54 AM)Zviedrs Wrote: (10-11-2022, 10:21 PM)Jesper Wrote: I would like to ride a specific stage of each of the Gran Tours (Le Tour, Vuelta, and Giro; not during a race of course!), and the Paris-Roubaix course.
I have a similar desire - some of the grand climbs (eg. Mount Ventoux) and the cobbles of Paris-Roubaix, the Arenberg Forest. Also, would love having a multiple-day tour in Norway.
You might be able to do the cobbles on your Merida but I don't want to rattle my bones! I'd rather do 14% grade on smooth tarmac up Zoncolon!
Although I've never had the ambition, or time, to train and accomplish this, one of my clients did the RAAM. RACE ACROSS AMERICA.
Started in 1982 as the Great American Bike Race, the Ride Across America (“RAAM”) is an ultra-distance road cycling race that crosses approximately 3,000 miles across the United States. It is perhaps the most demanding and grueling endurance race in the world. Like the Ironman triathlon championships held in Kona, Hawaii each year, RAAM participants must qualify by completing an approved course in a specified time-period.
The RAAM always begins on the west coast and ends on the east coast. There are no stages, like the Grand Tours of bike racing including the Tour de France. RAAM racers go non-stop from start to finish. Competitors manage their own schedules, stopping only to eat, sleep, and make gear changes when needed.
The RAAM clock runs continuously from start to finish, and the final overall finish time includes rest periods. Historically, the winner usually finishes in eight to nine days, after riding approximately 22-hours per day, every day across America. The severity of riding continuously for days with little to no sleep places RAAM in the category of ultra-distance cycling races. Approximately half of the race’s solo competitors drop out due to exhaustion or injury.
There is a team edition to this also.