Monday, May 24, 2010

The countdown begins

Four weeks. Melissa and I are leaving in four (!?) weeks. We still have a few loose ends to tie and this past weekend was a big one for us. Some of the more important things we accomplished:
  • We cooked on the camp stove twice. And we both still have both of our eyebrows! And . . . this one is very important . . . Melissa figured out the "perfect grind" for the french press that we are taking.
  • I planned out ("planned" being a very loose word) the first couple weeks of the tour, looking at where we might camp each night. I realized biking across the country is going to take a long time! (Okay, I already knew this, but actually seeing it on paper was a different beast all together.)
  • We then (because of the aforementioned) had a small melt down about our June 21 departure date, wondering if we should be leaving earlier. Will we make it to Yellowstone before the roads become impassable from snow?! (Mmmmm, I guess we didn't actually accomplish anything here -- unless night sweats count.)
  • I also put together a first aid kit. So . . . if we do get hypothermia and frostbite while in Montana, at least we will have some antibacterial cream and Band-Aids to dress it.

Brooke

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Bicycle Travel Network interview


Below are our answers to the interview questions asked by the Bicycle Travel Network. They are conducting interviews with each of their scholarship winners as a way to promote bicycle travel. We'll post the link as soon as it is up!

THE PLAN-We are using Adventure Cycling maps for our entire journey. Because we are first time bike tourists (read: clueless and nervous), we’ve chosen to be driven (gasp!) in a car (double gasp!) to our starting point on the TransAmerican Bicycle route. So, we are being driven from Columbus, Ohio to Berea, Kentucky, where we will start the TransAmerican Bicycle Route and head west. When we reach Missoula, Montana, we hope to do a loop into Canada, around Lake Louise. The Canada loop is contingent on timing and weather. After the jaunt into Canada, we plan to continue on the TransAmerican Bicycle Route to Oregon to stay with friends. If we skip Canada, it will be straight to Oregon to see our friends and their new baby boy. From there, we may go north up the Pacific Coast Route, to Vancouver, because Vancouver is awesome. On the way back down the coast we hope to meet up with another old friend in Seattle and head back south down the coast with him. After we reach the southern most part of the Pacific Coast Route, we are somewhat open to settling down somewhere for awhile, or if our financial situation looks good, and we have the desire, we may keep touring. We also are considering sticking around on the West Coast for the remaining months of winter and taking the Northern Tier Route back home to the Midwest in the spring. During our travels, we will be blogging about our experiences, good and bad, at www.theroadbeneathus.blogspot.com. It will be our main means of keeping in contact with friends and family. And we definitely hope to be a source of information for other want-to-be bicycle tourists!

THE ROUTE-We chose the TransAmerican Bicycle Route for our first tour because it goes through so many amazing parts of the country. A major plus about doing the TransAm Route is that it goes through Yellowstone and Glacier National Park -- two places we are both interested in visiting. Also, this particular route appears to have sections that go through small town America, which we both agree will be conducive to meeting lots of people while touring. We want interesting experiences, and we want to fall easily into conversations with with the people we see along the way, and this route seems best suited to that goal. The last major reason we chose this route is because it is heavily traversed, and we want the security of knowing that it is likely we will see other bike tourists along the way.

WHY BY BIKE?-We are bikers through and through, so a bike tour seemed like such a natural choice for us. We both bike commute to work daily, we race road bikes, cyclocross bikes and do triathlons, so doing a bike tour was appealing because it involved riding bikes. In addition, it is obviously less expensive than driving across the country. Plus, the idea of carrying everything you need to live on your bike, and going at your own pace was really, really appealing to us. We know from bike commuting to work daily that you see more, feel more and are more a part of your environment on a bike, so it seems like a great way to see the country.

WHAT WE WANT TO GAIN- We are both hoping to see if there really are other possibilities in life and alternative ways of living. We want to experience a time in our lives that doesn’t revolve around 9-5 jobs, material possessions and the mundane tasks of everyday life. Practically speaking, we want to gain touring experience and camping experience, and we want these hobbies to eventually come naturally to us, so much so that we’ll feel comfortable heading out on smaller trips without such extensive planning. We hope to be enlightened to a different way of living. We also look forward to meeting new people, and living a life that is unplanned and new everyday. Also, I (Melissa) am hoping that possibly if I remain open to different opportunities, that I will find more direction in my career.

PERSONAL FEARS-Yes, we certainly do have a few personal fears regarding the upcoming bike trip. We (OK, Melissa mostly) have a somewhat irrational fear that we will end up featured on a Dateline NBC episode because someone found our bodies chopped up hidden under a drainage ditch in the middle of nowhere. While I know the aforementioned scenario is crazy and irrational, we do have fears regarding personal safety. However, we both understand that time and time again people do this route and have nothing but great things to say about the wonderful people they met along the way. Another major fear is rooted in finances, or lack thereof. Since we quit our jobs to do the tour, we are concerned about finding new jobs when the trip is over. We have been relatively good at keeping these concerns at bay, but the fear of having a really rough time settling back down post bike tour, definitely weighs heavily on our minds at times. Predictably, we are also afraid of bears in Yellowstone, and making a major camping mistake, like causing a fire or running out of water at a really terrible time. The fear of getting horribly lost is not a major fear, but it is a nagging fear, especially when combined with the vision of being lost in a torrential downpour with lightening and thunder going off like bombs all around.

BIGGEST HURDLE- The biggest hurdle was actually getting to the point where we decided to quit our jobs to do this. It was a decision we didn’t take lightly. It is scary to outright quit a job that you have come to rely on, but we wanted this bike tour to be a once in a lifetime, life changing experience and we didn’t want to be held back by work related time constraints. So, because we wanted the trip to be epic, and because for it to actually be life changing, we decided to set our start date out for a little over a year and save, save, save money. That’s how we overcame our fear of quitting our jobs. We just looked hard at what we really wanted out of life right now, and decided that 9-5 jobs, and household chores and mundane tasks simply wasn’t what we wanted. We also knew that to do what we wanted it would be necessary to have some money saved in the bank, so we cut corners, stopped splurging on material things, and lived very thriftily over the last year. It came down to the fact that we wanted adventure more than security. Ultimately, now, post resignation from our jobs and the trip looming in the distance, the biggest hurdle seems to be avoiding the temptation to worry incessantly about finding a new job when the bike tour is over. To deal with this, we try to stay present, and we try to avoid getting caught up in worrying about the future. Because really, who knows anything about the future. It sounds stupid and cliche, but focussing on the positives, not the negatives, goes a long way when you are doing something like this.

USING THE SCHOLARSHIP- The book we won is a lodging book, so we will use that whenever needed (which will most likely be all the time). We’re grateful to have it, because we do worry about having difficulty finding lodging/campsites with ease. The mirrors that were generously provided, will be put on our touring bikes.

LOOKING FORWARD TO MOST-We’re looking forward to actually getting into the routine of touring. Most of all, we want to feel amazed and invigorated by our surroundings and nature. We want to experience genuine moments of freedom and not have a set schedule. We look forward to dealing with whatever gets thrown our way and becoming more self reliant. The idea of bike touring with the bare minimum, not really knowing where you will be tomorrow or the day after, is what we look forward to.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Friendship




The past weekend was one of the last friend filled crazy beer swigging Brouhahas I will have the pleasure of experiencing for some time. At age 33, I cherish the familiarity of the friends I made in my 20‘s. They know me, and I know them inside and out. After countless hilarious shenanigans, goofy stunts at happy hours, botched relationships, laughs and tears, broken bones, and most recently dolly rides ending in stitches, these people are irreplaceable to me. There is so much history here. The weekend was bittersweet for me, because I know I’m leaving my friends and my life here behind. Change is such a mixed bag. It’s a blizzard of mixed emotions and inconsistent feelings. I know the challenging episodes involved in change will push me to explore my life with a renewed honesty. I want to discover the useful unknown truths about myself,.... blah blah. I could blather on here about all of the exhilarating experiences I’m sure to have on this journey, but it won’t take away the pain of change, the fear of loss. I miss my friends already, I don’t want new friends.

Melissa

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Giving notice

I told myself I wasn't going to do it, but I did. Twice. I cried. And then I cried some more.

I gave my work notice on Monday. And although I am excited about the bike tour, I cried before I could even get the words out. Nationwide has been a really great company to work for. I like the people I work with, the people I work for; I like my desk, I like the gym in the basement; I like the company's Green initiatives and I like their involvement in the community; I like the security guards and I like the people who work in the coffee shop -- the list could go on forever because I like a lot about Nationwide. This was also really hard for me because I hate disappointing people. The people I work for have given me a lot of opportunity and knowledge and I know I could have a very successful future at Nationwide. I could easily be a happy Nationwider for life.

I spent the better half of Monday morning with a stomach ache and hives. I nervously paced in front of my bosses office, trying to work up the nerve to let him know of my plans. When I finally did, I was nervous and uneasy and I could barely tell him what I wanted to say, what I had practiced saying in front of the mirror for days. But Rod, the head of the department, was amazing. He gave me hope. He was genuinely happy for me and supportive. What I thought was going to be a horrible moment, ended up being a really awesome and motivating one.

It's scary quitting a job. It's especially scary when you don't have another job lined-up. I know I may have a really hard time finding employment in the future. I don't know what's going to happen. Admittedly, my palms get a little sweaty when I think about a future without a paycheck. But, on the other hand, my heart pounds a little bit harder when I think about all the things I will see and experience on the road.

Brooke

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Beef Bus meets the Short North

Yesterday Melissa and I loaded up the touring bikes and rode around town. This was for me, gulp, the first time I had ever ridden Beef Bus, my newly anointed bike. (I know, I'm very ashamed of this fact.). Before heading out the door, we packed our panniers with whatever we could find. For me this ended up being a couple of soft, fluffy towels. Let me say that again-- I loaded up my touring bike with Soft. Fluffy. Towels.

Now, let me also tell you this: Melissa and I live in a basement apartment, which means our front door is up a flight of seven steps. Normally before any bike ride, I would pick up my bike, put the top tube over my shoulder and merrily skip up those stairs and out the door without another thought. Yesterday, that was not the case. Yesterday I almost got a hernia or threw out my back, or both, trying to haul my fully loaded (with soft, fluffy towels) Beef Bus up the stairs. After some curse words, a light sweat and some "umphs" and "errs" I was outside. Yes, touring bikes are heavy.

If you have ever ridden a touring bike, you know that they are a completely different beast than a road bike. They are heavy and big and, well, loaded down. So I mounted the bike and began to gingerly pedal, but . . . it actually wasn't bad. It was fun. And it made me really excited. But I also realized that I need to get out on that bike a little more. I could feel the difference in my legs between this beef bus bicycle and my other lighter, snappier bikes within the first couple of minutes. And I could also see the difference. It's amazing how much you can see when you are riding at a slower pace. But that is the point isn't it? When you bike tour, you want to go slow. You want to see as much as you can. You want to slow down the pace -- and that is exactly what I am looking forward to.

Brooke

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Taking risks

On June 21, we are leaving on an adventure that we have been preparing for for over a year. When thinking back, we can’t pinpoint the moment the decision was made to go on the bike tour. Was it possibly a fleeting thought that stuck? Was it a grand discussion where we weighed the pros and cons? Regardless, we have been living and breathing this dream for almost a year now. Soon we will be quitting our jobs, packing up all of our belongings and departing on a self-sustained cross-country bike tour.

A lot of people think we have lost our minds. And you know what? It will be scary and if you let yourself dwell in negative thoughts, you can consume yourself in fear and talk yourself out of just about anything. But we want to do this BECAUSE it will be hard. Undeniably, some of it will be unbearable and ugly and not fun. But more often than not, there will be parts of our bike tour that will be so amazing and unplanned and beautiful.

Recently, this advice was given to us in an email, The people that think what you are doing is crazy are asleep. I’m not sure if the person who typed this was quoting someone else, or speaking from his heart, but it is something that I will repeat to myself while on the road and for the rest of my life.

What people don’t think about when we tell them about our bike tour is what we will find out about ourselves and the world while on our bikes, with the sky above us and the road beneath us.

Welcome to The Road Beneath Us! Follow us on our cross-country bike tour, departing June 21, 2010.