December 16, 2020
It has been nine years since I attended a winter training camp and rode a professional race, yet each winter, I still have the desire to rebuild. Perhaps, the pull to ride remains as it had been the routine and the rhythm of my life for decades. My love for cycling is as strong as ever yet I now see it in a different light, appreciating every ride, and the privilege it is, whether the commute work or a day in the countryside.
Each weekend, as the cold creeps into the Canadian countryside, I now ride with a group of friends from the neighbourhood, and kids in our club. No longer am I conditioning my body for a season of racing, or even working to be fit. Yet the sense of accomplishment, the surge of endorphins, after a good ride in the cold weather, remains. With each week, and an accumulation of kilometers, the teenagers in the club progress— full of potential and desire, their sprints become quicker, their endurance improves, and their pedalstrokes become smoother.
Two by two, we ride in tight formation. In Covid times our groups are now small and we are cautious not to get too close. The older riders teach the younger how to get comfortable on the wheel, where to place themselves in the wind, and how to hold a steady speed. In the windier sections, we’ll shift into a paceline, upping the speed, and finding a new rhythm. The kids have seen new places, ridden distances before unachieved, and are only just discovering their potential and the sense of fulfillment a good winter ride can give. They've only just begun.
By Michael Barry