@Marco’s take
Somewhere midway, I realized: looking fantastic while riding batshit fast through unknown territory in Rule #9 conditions in mid-December is hard.
The shortest day seemed appropriate for a winter Cogal. It is what one does that day. With abundant Rule #9 conditions, one wouldn’t want to dwell too long upon it.
Only strong riders showed up around 08:45 in the am. We had our pre-ride espresso and duly left the fortified town of Muiden at exactly 09:0V. We headed South-east, riding two abreast, slightly hindered by the wind blowing with gusts of up to 70 km/h. It didn’t really rain yet. It was more of a refreshing drizzle. On our minds, among many things, were the fellow Velominati riding at that very same moment in Scotland. We were ready. Nothing was going to stop us.
After two hours we stopped for a coffee (and apple pie with whipped cream, as is customary in our peculiar, swampy country by the sea). Reinforcements were inbound. Two more strong riders showed up. Although they were not in for the full Cogal, their arrival was appreciated. Little did I know that these hard men would take my companion Velominatus and I on a rollercoaster ride through a breathtakingly beautiful piece of the Netherlands called the “Utrechtse Heuvelrug”. The climbs are not really steep, but they are long, plentiful and unrelenting. The pace was high, the turns at the front were full of intent and the weather seemed to worsen by the minute.
I punctured twice. Many comments were made, but both times I managed to slide in the new tube within five minutes. You don’t want to keep anyone waiting, right? The last hour and a half @Ruud and I rode back, helped by some tail-wind and cooled down by more serious rain.
After exactly 131 kilometers we arrived back in Muiden. With our recovery ale (Leffe tripel, what else?) we ate some ‘bitterballen’ (highly recommended to any and all visitors to the Netherlands) to replenish our protein levels. I had a fantastic ride with excellent company. I was proud to be part of what possibly was the first Cogal on the Old Continent.
VLVV!
Convener’s take
I needed my lights, as I set out for the meeting point a little after eight, and wondered who, if anyone, would show. The announcement on the site had brought no responses, and after a couple of dry days, the weather had turned wet and windy, though it was still fairly mild. So my high point of the day was seeing the-rider-currently-known-as-@Marco lift his bike from his car down the street from Café Ome Ko in Muiden. Of course there are Velominati on the old continent, you just need to make proper use of the site to bring them together. In Lage Vuursche (at the Vuursche Boer pancake restaurant once owned by team TI-Raleigh legend Gerrie Knetemann) Luuc “iron skull” Kooijmans and Wim “King of the Dolomites” van Heumen joined up. We wondered if the clip-on fender attached to the convener’s bike was actually permissible, but no one could remember a Rule explicitly banning these. On a wet outing in late December lasting a total of eight hours, the convener in any case was glad to have it. The same went for his waterproof socks. @Marco certainly agreed there, because he too was wearing a pair. Even though at times we got a nice, four-man rotation going, it soon became evident that in the circumstances, going all the way to the Amerongse Berg would be one or two hills too far. However, with brisk ascents of the Doornse berg (twice), the Ruiterberg, the Hoogstraat, and finally the riser toward Austerlitz to top it all off, we had nothing to be ashamed of. The Utrecht guys had it easy, because that middle part it hardly rained at all. The same cannot be said for the last 40k. Not that we complained. It was December 21; this was the first ever Cogal in Holland and possibly the entire continent of Europe; we were on it, embodying Rule #9; and with more than 100K under our wheels, we still felt pretty good. Only pretty good, however. Back in Muiden, while my companion put his bike in the car, I quickly went ahead to Cafe Ome Ko for a hot chocolate. I had to get back out there again, after all–ten more kilometers into the damp and rapidly moving air to get home–and it seemed like a good idea to ingest something warm ahead of the required malted recovery beverage. For me, the latter functioned more like Jan Raas’s famous “champagne bidon,” reportedly handed to him from the team car to boost his courage at the end of a race. I would not have felt the pedals those final kilometers anyway. An uncertain proposition only a few hours earlier, this Cogal had actually taken place, the weather had been most appropriate, and the company even better. Watch for us around June 21. Join us, if you’re actually serious about being a Cyclist.
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/j.andrews3@comcast.net/Amsterdam cogal/”/]
I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…
Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…
The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…
Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…
This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…
I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…
View Comments
@Philippe Duterloo Well, June 21st is a Saturday. I think we can start preparing for that day. As mentioned earlier, both the longest and shortest days seem appropriate for a Velominatus to pay his tribute to the seasons and to the bike.
The location for the next Dutch Cogal is, as far as I know, still up for grabs. We might opt for Limburg... Alternatively, the region I come from (around Zandvoort) offers some excellent riding possibilities. This is what I ran into yesterday...
@meursault
I think @936adl is referring to L'Eroica Britannia. @936adl assuming I remember correctly that it was you who has also registered, did you manage to enter before their system crapped out? I managed to complete the entry at about the third attempt before it seemingly went AWOL.
@Teocalli
It wasn't me i'm afraid. I'm not registered for it.
I was referring to an event we run locally which takes us from our base in Shropshire across Wales to the coast and then back again! It's a long day in the saddle that's for sure. We're planning it for Friday 20th June next year.
@936adl Many many years ago I used to live at Talke Pits and some colleagues decided to cycle from Congleton to Abersoch. That morning when I woke up and turned on the radio the first thing I heard was "There are Gales in all areas........Irish Sea Westerly Gale force 8 occasionally severe Gale force 9.....". The guys couldn't even hold top gear going downhill.
Is Ruud the same Ruud who used to live in Milwaukee? Well-known and missed hard man if it is!
Wow, a whole bunch of places I have never visited, much less ridden a bicycle around.
Nice report on good on ya for braving the distance and weather. Always fun to hear from Followers living in very different parts of the world.
@wiscot It's him, and there are days he wishes he was back in Wisconsin! Don't let the Holy Hill route go to waste in my absence.
@Ruud You create legends wherever you ride. Personally I have another 1200 kms in the legs since we last met. I look forward to riding again! I should be somewhat less too heavy to climb.
@Ruud
I'll try, but there are better and quieter roads up north around Dundee, Waucousta, Fillmore and Waubeka. Weather here is awful - ice storm (well, rain falling on very cold ground = ice, on Friday) and 6-8" of snow scheduled today. Sunday's ride was pretty sketchy in places and had to resort to the "one foot in, one foot out" style of riding.