La Voix

Cycling is Prohibited in France, Italy, and Spain 😱

Sign of the times. Photo captured on Sunday morning, March 29, 2020. If you have to ask where the photo was taken, you have never ridden the World Famous Sunday Nichols Ride. 😎Having said that, the photo has been Photoshopped. The first La Grange m…

Sign of the times. Photo captured on Sunday morning, March 29, 2020. If you have to ask where the photo was taken, you have never ridden the World Famous Sunday Nichols Ride. 😎Having said that, the photo has been Photoshopped. The first La Grange member to contact me who identifies what part of the image was Photoshopped wins a free 2020 La Grange cycling cap.

Yes, it is April 1, 2020, and I wish the headline was an April Fools joke but it is not. Think about that. Cycling is prohibited in France, Italy, and Spain. If you are reading this you must be interested in cycling, and you know that cycling has three “Grand Tours,” which are the Tour de France, Giro d’Italia, and the Vuelta a España. These are three-week bicycle races in France, Italy, and Spain, and they are beyond difficult. Cycling in these countries is a major part of life. The Grand Tours draw some of the largest crowds of spectators for a sporting event in the world. Yet, all three countries have prohibited cycling for sport, for leisure, and for physical exercise, and as of press time, the Giro d’Italia has been postponed to a tentative date in September.

You might be asking yourself why cycling was prohibited during this pandemic. The reason is very simple. When a bike crash happens it might injure a rider severe enough to require medical attention. The first stop is the emergency room and all three countries are in a war against the coronavirus, and all human resources and hospital equipment need to be available for victims of this very infectious disease. In addition, the last place anyone who does not have the virus or works at a hospital wants to be is in the emergency room.

The experts to listen to are the epidemiologists and infectious disease specialists. There is a reason this is called a pandemic. It is extremely contagious and it is infecting humans on every continent on Earth except Antarctica. There is no socioeconomic class that it is not affecting. We all need to continue to practice social distancing, and should consider that everyone we pass walking on the street, or see in the grocery store might be infected, and give them space. If you want to attend a large public or private gathering, or go back to work, and disregard social distancing before the experts say it is safe to do so, you are putting yourself, your family, and your friends in harm's way. It is for these reasons the Board has decided to suspend all of our weekly group rides.

If you decide to continue to ride outside during what is one of the worst healthcare crisis of our lifetime, be extra careful and do not ride in a large group. There are less cars on the road so drivers are driving faster. Please, be safe and make wise decisions. Normalcy will return but that completely depends on all of us doing our part to prevent the spread of the virus.

This is a historic time. Truly historic. Let’s hope that we all get through this and can meet for coffee after a ride and talk about how we survived, and what we did to help.

Rich Hirschinger
President, Velo Club La Grange
April 1, 2020

Here are some interesting links to view:
https://www.cyclist.co.uk/news/7904/france-latest-country-to-ban-recreational-cycling
https://www.bicycling.com/culture/a31913269/cyclist-diagnosed-with-coronavirus/
https://vimeo.com/399733860 A very good video from a physician who works at a hospital in NYC with 1,200 beds that is exclusively treating Covid19 patients. He explains what he has seen and what to do to protect yourself and your family.

March LG50 Ride

The ride was canceled due to the coronavirus but the Board, on behalf of all its members, made a donation to West Los Angeles Meals on Wheels. Please consider helping out this tremendous non-profit, or similar organizations, that help people who need help in this time of need. If you would like to help volunteer with Meals on Wheels, even by making calls at home, please view this PDF for more information.

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Castelli Kit Update

Valued Castelli Family,

Thank you for choosing Castelli for your team. We hope that you and your team are safe and healthy in this very challenging time. While cycling and triathlon events across the country have been delayed or canceled due to the COVID-19 virus, we understand that your team is still anxious to receive your new kits—even if they’re going to be used for indoor riding for a while. We want to update you on the status of our custom business and the impact that it will have on your order with us. Please share this information with your team members. We will continue to update you as the situation develops.

 Status of our custom business:

  • Production: As of 03/18/2020, the government of El Salvador has required all factories to close for a minimum of two weeks; this may be extended to four weeks. Unfortunately, this has impacted all of our custom orders, including yours. We will communicate the status of our production as information becomes available.

  • Materials: While we keep several months of materials on-hand, we have experienced some delays in the delivery of fabrics from Italy. This may have some impact on our production schedule. 

  • ShippingThis week we will receive additional custom items completed and shipped before the factory closure. In the interest of getting your team your products as early as possible, we will ship partial orders over the next two weeks. We will ship the remaining product as soon as it arrives.

  • Customer Service: While most of our team in Portland is required to work from home, we are continuing to receive and process orders, process new team artwork, and provide great customer service. 

Please direct any questions or concerns to your local sales rep, or to custom@castelli-us.com. We will provide you with any information that we can about your order.

Thank you for your patience and understanding. Best wishes, and happy and safe riding.

FOLLOW UP

Some additional production information by styles based on the latest production reports (as of 3/17), show the following: (Please note due to the factory closure on 3/18, this 3/17 update is our latest production update available at this time)

  • Pending Completion

    • Wind Jacket

    • M Team LS Jersey - Mexico

    • M San Remo 4.0 Speedsuit

    • M San Remo 4.0 Speedsuit - Mexico

    • M Team LS Jersey

    • W Free Aero Race 4 Bibshort

  • Shipped from Factory prior to closure (shipped from El Salvador 3/17)

    • Team Pro Mesh Sleeveless Baselayer

    • M Free Aero Race 4 Bibshort

    • W San Remo 4.0 Speedsuit

  • Shipped to Membership

    • All other styles

As noted in the business update, the items that shipped from the factory prior to its closure will be shipping out to membership in the upcoming week. We are continuing to monitor this situation with our production facility to find the soonest opportunity to safely continue production. We will continue to keep team leadership in close communication during this time and will be sure to provide them with any updates as we can.

Hope this information helps! Please don’t hesitate to reach out if there is any further information or assistance we can provide in the meantime. Thanks and hope you are all staying safe and healthy!

Best regards,
Mike Clodfelter

Cycling “Safer at Home”

Two virtual rides to inform you about:

Castelli Virtual Rides
Castelli will be hosting Zwift ride sessions every Tuesday at 10:25AM PST (being hosted by Castelli global team so time change gets us a bit).  Some information on this series can be found via the following link: https://blog.castelli-cycling.com/2020/03/26/zwift-ride-it-out-with-castelli/.

La Grange Virtual Rides
Our first two LG Zwift rides have had some small growing pains but overall they have been a success. We had 17 riders on the first weekend, 11 on the second. We rode different courses as well.

The first ride was on Saturday, March 21st at 8 am was Sand and Sequoias course, which is 13.1 miles with no real climbs. I had a tech issue with my AppleTV that morning, which caused me to miss the start of my own meetup! I was able to grab my laptop and get Zwift fired up, but I missed over half the ride.

We had our second ride, this past Saturday, March 28th that was also 8 am start. The route was "Our and Back Again," which is a 25-mile ride with two climbs towards the end. We had 11 riders, out of 32 invited. As our ride started at 8 am, we were quickly swallowed up by another Zwift group ride of over 200 people...so much for staying together. We broke up into small groups, and I found myself with four other riders; Dan Cooper, Steve Kang, Jimmy Whippet, and Geoff Loui. We managed to stay together and were maintaining a 2.0-3.0/watt per kilo pace. This was higher than I had hoped it would be. My goal was to keep the pace slow to keep everyone together, but with the chaotic start that didn't happen. So be it. We rode together for the next 40-50 minutes until we reached the top of the Volcano climb, at which point I slowed to try and pick up riders who had fallen behind. I managed to find one other rider, Giao Nguyen.

Both of these rides have been 1-1.5 hours in length, a great workout, and a lot of fun. Right now our LG rides are "meetups" on Zwift, meaning you must follow the ride organizer---in this case, me, for an invite. To do this, you find and follow me on the Zwift companion app. Once that is done, I can invite you to the ride from the list of followers. You will see a notification on both the companion app and the Zwift game itself (in the upper right corner) that the ride is coming up. You should RSVP either way and if you plan on riding, you can set reminders for the upcoming ride. Ideally, you should log into Zwift 5-10 minutes prior to ride time, and you will see the option to join the ride. If you log in later than the start time, you may not be able to join. Once the ride begins, there is a yellow ride beacon for the ride leader. Ideally, our group stays together following that beacon.

As we all come to grips with our radically changed daily lives, Zwift is proving to be a fantastic resource for people to get together, ride, meet-up and even talk with the use of the Discord app, which allows group conversations while riding. Now we just need a virtual Peet’s Coffee for after the ride! As we still in the beginning stages of these LG Zwift rides, there is definitely room for suggestions. Routes, times, days are also open to discussion.

A huge thanks goes out to Geoff Loui for all his help. If you need any other info or want to reach me via email at andrewevanr@gmail.com.

Thank you,
Andrew Rosenfeld

Screenshot of Andrew Rosenfeld on Zwift in his LG50 kit.

Screenshot of Andrew Rosenfeld on Zwift in his LG50 kit.

Race Reports: Tour de Murrieta

Morgan James wrote us a poem!

Race kits were red
The sky was blue
A crit full of shenanigans
But the circuit was too
If you thought that turning was safe
Your line might be cut off if you were too late
Flat tires and road rash and frustration galore
I’m still surprised that cyclist don’t start war 
Early morning breakfast and teammates to adore
La grange went beast mode and I couldn’t ask for more!

-----------

Tyler Scott writes more long form:

Woke up at the crack of dawn Saturday morning, quickly off to breakfast to stuff my face! Once I had topped the belly off it was a very short drive to the Crit course in downtown Murrieta. Got my numbers and had Daniele Monahan and Trevor Jahn help me put them on. Quickly got onto the course for a 15 minute warm up while also finding ideal lines and clean track.

Come race start for my group (Cat5), whistle blows and were off! Race had a decently fast start but settled in after about two laps. By settling in I mean instead of 800 watt surges it was only 500 watt surges every 15 seconds. Of course 10 wide down the straights, 4 wide with brakes into corners, you know typical cat 5 stuff.

Race didn't have much pace only averaging about 24mph, but the surging killed me. I learned from my first ever race not to let the front group go in cat 5. So I stayed about top 5-10 the whole race. Come the last lap The legs are pretty smoked and my heart rate was decently high. There was a big jump in pace coming down the back straight which used most of anything I had left in the tank, but I held good position through the last two corners. Then come the front straight, as soon as the last corner ended guys were out of the saddle in full sprint. I knew I simply didn't have it and just kept decent pressure on the pedals and watched 17 guys pass me. Overall great race got 24th out of 43 riders I believe, should have been top 10 but my legs failed me after all that surging.

Day 2 Circuit:

Sunday was about the same as previous with 1hr less sleep. 😁 Got to the road course unloaded and got to warming up quite quickly. I did a single lap of the course about 4 mile to read the course and have an idea what I was getting into. Overall great course for me personally. I'm not a road racer but If I have to this would be the course I would choose. Race got off to a VERY slow start, like social group ride pace. I said well, I'm not complaining that's for sure, All just stay in the top 6-8 and chill out. Then the surging commenced. 😅😅 Still legs felt good and heart rate stayed down.

Here's where the shenanigans begin. After about two neutrals 5-7 laps in two civilian cars got onto the course and really threw a wrench in the whole operation. 😄About 15 guys from my field charged the cars and when around after one of the thinly spread Marshalls had said to "hold pace". I guess people didn't realize you shouldn't pass cars on an open course for safety reasons and they should be treated as a neutral. Regardless, cars were passed, Marshall lost any voice that she had left exploding into rage and disbelief. A head shake from myself and then the race continued a few miles down road.

Come last lap I was in great position about top 15, lost quite a few positions on the back side of the track knowing I would make them up in the following final turns to come. Sure enough I made up about 20+ positions in 3 turns. Tried to give it what I had to the finish line (wasn't much) and got 17th place.

Best part of all of this is the Marshalls decided to DQ the entire cat5 field due to the car incident So my best road race finish to date is not, and will not be on paper. Great training ride I guess.

All and all I performed better than I expected and placed better than anticipated overall. Good weekend for me and learned a lot on racecraft. Sorry for the novel, but I can't speak shortly. 😴

Women's P1/2/3 Tour de Murrieta video recap

Beautiful start for the women's 3/4/5 circuit race at Tour de Murrieta.

Beautiful start for the women's 3/4/5 circuit race at Tour de Murrieta.

The women's team cheering on Liz in the P1/2/3 TDM grand prix.

The women's team cheering on Liz in the P1/2/3 TDM grand prix.

Women's team meeting.

Women's team meeting.

Danie pedal shark in her second race of the day at TDM.

Danie pedal shark in her second race of the day at TDM.

Morgan charging down the straight.

Morgan charging down the straight.

Sarah cruising into turn one at TDM GP.

Sarah cruising into turn one at TDM GP.

Women's team at TDM.

Women's team at TDM.

Peter takes second at TDM!

Peter takes second at TDM!

Pre race rituals, Trevor and Pablo pinning on numbers.

Pre race rituals, Trevor and Pablo pinning on numbers.

Men's cat 3 coming into turn 1.

Men's cat 3 coming into turn 1.

Garnett and Peter doing a little race recap.

Garnett and Peter doing a little race recap.

Top step for Alan at TDM!

Top step for Alan at TDM!

Virtual Racing by Tina Grant

Racing and riding outside is always going to be my personal preference. It gives us energy, confidence and frankly pure bliss. When we'll be able to return to our usual cycling routine is unclear so until then we need to look to alternatives. This week I've partnered with the San Diego Bicycle Club, Machines for Freedom and Zwift to create events for us to get together to celebrate our sport. Targeting virtual rides and races will help connect us while keeping us fit. If feedback is good we'll continue targeting other events in the future. Have a favorite virtual social ride or race? Please pass it on!  If members have questions about smart trainers or virtual training platforms I'd be happy to set up a zoom chat to discuss. 

La Grange and SDBC race team captains Tina and Pat working together in a virtual race on Zwift.

La Grange and SDBC race team captains Tina and Pat working together in a virtual race on Zwift.

La Grange looking sharp in their 50th anniversary kits on Zwift.

La Grange looking sharp in their 50th anniversary kits on Zwift.

New Members

Welcome to the following 4 new members who joined in March 2020:

Peter, Nell, Jim, and David