Saturday, August 29, 2020

The Other Ripon

 Last September I went to the UCI World Cycling Championship in Yorkshire England. I rented a beautiful Airbnb in a small town outside of Harrowgate ,where all the races were finishing, called Ripon. I hap an amazing first week riding to all of the races with a local bike club to watch the races. The people, the place was wonderful. I had the time of my life. Sadly at the same time my father was going though the end of his life. I flew home right away. I missed the second week of Worlds. But there was no way I wasn’t going to be there for my father. I made it back in time to spend the final week of his life with him. And to be with him when he passed. I would never trade anything for that. I miss him everyday more than words can say. 

I did get back to England for the London 6 Day. But I do feel like I have unfinished business in Ripon. So to my amazement I came upon a town in Wisconsin called Ripon. I had to go. I’m there now. It is absolutely nothing like it’s namesake but it has brought back memories. Here are some pictures of the USA version of Ripon.








When the world opens back up, I will go back to Ripon England.

Friday, August 28, 2020

Elkhart Lake Speedway - the original Road America

 Last August I got to race a tandem bike at Road America in Elkhart Lake Wisconsin. It was a 12 hour race to benefit Team Triumph to continue their mission to support a more inclusive community for disabled athletes. The event was thru the night 7pm-7am. Not really in my wheel house. But we made the best of it and had fun. We were able to get in 100 miles in 12 hours while still getting a relatively decent nights sleep. 

I never thought I would be back in this area just one year later. As luck would have it, with an eye surgery and having to fly back home and then back to Milwaukee, I was not that far away. When I landed in Milwaukee I had no plans of how far I was going to go the first day back in the van. So I got on the Boondockers Welcome website and found a place to stay in the area. Turns out I found a wonderful location in Elkhart Lake. I signed up to stay for 3 days so I could reacclimate to vanlife. Day 1 it rained hard all morning so I reorganized the van. 

During my day 2 bike ride I found historical road markers for the old road course in downtown Elkhart Lake. When car road racing was a thing. Certainly not going to happen anymore. It must of been amazing to watch let a lone drive. So I did a lap of the old course and here are the pictures of the signs. 


I finished off with ice cream. 

Because of the bad quality of these pictures from my phone I'm going to start carrying my iPad on my bike rides. 

Thursday, August 27, 2020

Ice Age Trail Hike

 Here is a quick blog post of pictures from my after ride after dinner hike of Ice Age Trail.














Tuesday, August 25, 2020

First Full Day Back





 After two trouble free flights back to Milwaukee I caught the shuttle to the airport parking lot to finally get back to my van. What a wonderful site to see sitting in the parking lot right where I left it. Click the key fob and voila the van unlocks. Great sound, means the battery still working. I open everything up to let the van air out a bit. Check everything over and everything is perfect. What a relief.


Okay now it’s time to pay the parking bill..... $230 not too bad for almost a full month. Off to the gas station and Walmart to restock my food supplies and find a place to spend the night.


I check out my old standby Boondockers Welcome and first shot I find nice place in Elkhart Lake near Road America, that is where I did the 12 hour tandem ride last year. I sign up for 3days here so I can get my life back in place, clean up my van and go for a couple days of bike rides. No rush to go anywhere, just enjoy life!


Last night I slept with all the doors open so I could see the stars and enjoy the night air. Around 3am I was woken up by thunder right as it started to rain. I jumped up ran outside to close the back doors and sliding door just as it began to rain very hard. It rained the rest of the night. Who knew it was going to rain. Oh well.


First full day back in the van started as a rainy day. Quite the blessing actually, I spent the morning cleaning and reorganizing everything. I pulled everything out of every clubby hole and found proper places for most everything. During a few breaks from the rain I was able to get Jill’s mountain bike packed up for shipping back to Maryland. Which also allowed me to reorganize the van garage too.


The sun finally showed itself around 2pm. I drove to Fond Du Lac to ship Jill’s bike from a UPS store. Then I went to get my wheel fixed at a bike shop in Winnebago. I even went to Planet Fitness in Oshkosh for a quick workout and shower. A stop at the Piggley Wiggley on the way back to camp made for a very productive day. 


Tomorrow I will go for a good long bike ride in the morning before the 90 degree weather returns.


Monday, August 24, 2020

The Adventure Continues


August 24

And the adventure continues, I’m back on the train heading to the Philadelphia Airport flying to Milwaukee to hopefully find my van. It has been almost a month since I had to cut my trip mid adventure to have semi emergency eye surgery. 

An update on my eye condition, when I flew back to Philadelphia on July 27th I could not see pretty much anything out of my right eye. I had a detachment of my retina which made about 90% of my sight in that eye black. Long story short, surgery on July 29th by the amazing Dr Garg ( kind of funny that his name is what a one eyed pirate would say) and now I can see again. It is not fully 100% perfect but it is getting better all the time. 


A bit about my surgery, I had what is called a Vitrectomy Surgery.

As the name implies, it involves surgical removal of the vitreous gel which, in turn, relieves the traction or pulling on the retinal tear that is causing the detachment. Laser is then used to seal the retinal tears. Lastly, the eye is filled with gas. The gas goes away slowly on its own, in a few weeks. During this time you can not fly until the gas goes away. I guess your eye might pop. Hence way I’ve been hanging out at home for almost a month. 


Here is some information about retina detachment and some warning signs. I missed a couple a few months ago. Oops ðŸ˜¬ 



A retinal detachment is a separation of the retina from the underlying layers of the eye wall.  The retina is the thin layer of tissue that retains the vision cells in the back of the eye—think of it as the film inside a camera. The image that one sees is focused by the lens and cornea in the front of the eye and then cast upon the center of the retina (macula) in the back of the eye.

Over time, retinal detachment will lead to progressive loss of peripheral and, eventually, central vision.  Left untreated, total and permanent loss of sight eventually occurs in most cases.



Retinal tears and associated detachments of the retina are often spontaneous and unpredictable events.  While detachment can arise following trauma, it is usually caused by separation of the vitreous gel from the retina.  Over time as we age, the vitreous gel liquefies. It eventually collapses upon itself and separates from the surface of the retina (posterior vitreous detachment).  During or shortly after this event, a retinal tear can occur as a result of the gel pulling on the thin retinal tissue.

Risk factors for developing retinal tears and detachment include myopia (near-sightedness), particularly thin patches within the peripheral retina (lattice degeneration), family history, previous eye surgery, and trauma.


Symptoms of vitreous detachment, retinal tear, and retinal detachment may coexist and include:

  • Sudden onset of floaters (mobile blackspots or cobwebs in the vision)
  • Sudden onset of flashing lights in vision
  • Blurred vision
  • Gradual loss of peripheral vision in the form of a shadow, curtain, or cloud (this corresponds to the retina detaching.)


Retinal detachments often cause some degree of permanent visual field or central visual acuity loss, even after successful reattachment. Final visual outcomes are best if the detachment is detected and treated before it involves the center of the retina (macula). A change of eyeglasses after retinal detachment surgery may or may not improve vision. Longstanding retinal detachments or those with associated scar tissue (proliferative vitreoretinopathy) typically have a poor visual prognosis.

Slowly Healing

 It has been 15 days since my eye surgery, so far everything is going fine. I spent most of the first week laying in bed watching movies. A big departure from riding 200 miles a week and hiking most days.  I've been a model patient resting, sleeping. eating the right things, wearing my eye patch at night and taking my eye drops as prescribed with alarms set at regular intervals. 

At my last doctor appointment I was told everything is going fine. I asked about how long I had to lay around and the Doc said I no longer had to stay still on one side. I asked about exercising, he said whatever I feel comfortable with just don't push it. I said good I'm going for a bike ride. 

And RIDE I DID !

In the past not quite 3 weeks I rode 577 miles. Not bad for working with one eye. Actually I had 257 miles last week alone. 


Sunday, August 9, 2020

Sunday, August 2, 2020

Eye Update

Eye Update 


Another quick update since my eyesight is still crappy. My days are spent either face down or on my left side watching movies or listening to music. So far my vision is not too bad, I see movement all the way around my peripheral vision which is very promising. It is like looking under water, which is very accurate since I am looking though a gas bubble. 


Currently watching Susan Werner live Sunday show.