schmalz’s log week 5

Enter to win!

This past week, my pilgrimage to the Strip Mall of Mightiness has been waylaid by a cold. I’m not sure how normal people react to colds, but we pretend bike racers react to sickness with the same energy as a Belieber does when Justin gets passed over for song of the year at the Kid’s Choice Awards, there’s hysterics, arm flapping and tears, oceans of tears.

Because it’s unfair. We pretend bike racers are fastidious about our heath and physical fitness and to have that interrupted, nay, assaulted by a viral interloper is a tragedy, plain and simple. You would think that viruses would be repelled by the force field our smugness and sense of superiority create, but it takes a lot of effort to keep the smugness shields deployed at full power, and sometimes you slip and let a virus in. Your defenses have been compromised. And that means you start to fall behind in the imaginary arms race with the other pretend bike racers.

Now that being a pretend bike racers is a year round preoccupation, days missed on the bike are like dog years, they get multiplied by a factor of 7, and they hump most everything in the living room. Each day spent allowing your body to recuperate is a day you are not pounding yourself into a race-dominating paste. You opponents are surely doing uphill one-legged drills while you drink soothing teas and blast all manners of awfulness out of your head with a Neti Pot. Why must life be so unfair!

I chose to allow myself three days for healing (which in dog racing terms, adds up to 21 days—nearly a month behind already!), before heading out for a gentle amble this week. My head was still slightly congested, so it felt as if the chimney to my mightiness factory was clogged, forcing the mightiness within to pile up in pallets of idleness, to be delivered at a later date. But there was no mightiness today, my locomotive’s fire lacked its normal stoke.

I shall continue to ride with my intake set to "mucous" for the foreseeable future, but I will not allow it to deter me in my quest for mightiness, and with each expectoration, I will inch closer to redeploying my shield of smugness.

Roman’s Beer Corner

This week’s selection is Lawson’s Double Dose IPA by Otter Creek Brewing. Roman has been concerned about the availability of the beers that he selects for the beer of the week, as many of them are not readily accessible to say, people. So he’s proposed a solution, Roman will deliver a sample of a beer (not necessarily the one in each week’s beer corner—I say that in case the sample somehow get "misplaced" in my or anyone else’s tummy) to the week’s contest winner. There are caveats to the contest, of course. Roman ranges far on his bicycle, but he does not deliver outside of the NYC area, so if you are in Wyoming, you are out of luck. Also, Roman will get to you when he gets to you—he’s a busy guy. And, of course, you have to be over 21, because I’m not really sure how legal any of this is in the first place, but there’s no way we’re tempting fate by delivering beer to minors, we only buy beer for kids in 7-11 parking lots, the way God intended.

That being said, if you would like to have a cuddly Russian bring you a rare beer on his trusty Centurion, you must write a limerick (follow the proper pattern please) lamenting what it’s like to be a cyclist with a cold in the comments below. I will choose a winner on Monday, and you will get a beer sometime in the future.

 

 

 

39 Comments

Martin Topcap

A rider with blog entries quite haughty
Yet cycling performance quite spotty
Has put his riding on hold
Due to a cold, we are told
His only joy now from trips to the potty

Charlyrosso

Home, this article struck
As I’ve been out of luck
This week my nagging cold got stuck
Although my medicine should work
If a Double Dose I gulp

Matthieu Neck

There was a racer from nantucket
Who told his rivals to go suck it
Until he got a cold
Which made him feel so old
Now instead of racing he says fuck it.

Simone Dropout

There once was a racer named fuld
Who also came down with a cold
It sucked out the joy
From that silly young boy
And put his cat 2 dream on hold

at sea

There once was a racer named Eli,
Whose writing had people saying ‘oh my’
his riding as well
was just so so swell
not nearly as good as ‘THE Brian!’

Fork

There once was a biker named Eli,
he really sucks assholes dry.
He aimed at Schmalz’s style,
but he missed by a mile
And having a cold really sucks too.

Maxime Supple

Battenkill reg opens next week,
But this cold has made me feel weak.
Stressing over numbers.
To train or to slumber?
When did we become such geeks?

hein57

a boy from ohio moved here
fake bike racing makes him smile ear to ear
then he got sick
and requested a limerick
and roman delivers you beer

Tom Compliant

Wow, did they raise the entry for Battenkill again? Now $95 with big increases on 1/1 and 3/1, I did it 2 years ago and it was $75 up from $65 the year before and no increase after 1/1 or 3/1.

Curious to see if the # of entries go down somewhat. Testing the supply and demand curve..I guess.

Alessio Liner

I think demand will remain high for Battenkill.
The real crime is Dieter charging similar prices for his other races, which have worse support and are not very high caliber. Those races are going to see a big drop in demand. He pissed off a lot of people last year.

Valentin Polished

there once was a man from Nantucket
he had a dick so long he could suck it
one fine day he said to himself
if my ear was a c_nt, I could f_ck it
but, it’s not, so I guess I’ll go for a ride instead

Matteo Grips

There was an sick man named Dan
For relief he ate beans from a can
His colon swelled
His wife said oh well
Now his man cave smells like an Orangutan

Mauro Skidmark

There once was a Dan who climbed Perkins
Thank heavens his legs they were workin’
Then one day came a cold
His legs felt too old
For riding or even for twerkin’

Eli

The cold will impede no such dream
Cat 2 is in reach, it still seems
So pack up your bags
And peddle elsewhere
Cause I’m only just picking up steam.

Alexander Bushing

There was an ill man named Dan
who increasingly rides like an old man
clandestinely listens to the Eagles
while working his kegles
all part of some Floyd training plan

Yanis Headset

While Eli’s fitness is peaking
his rep here is steadily sinking.
Between posts that are racist
or otherwise tasteless
to the random crap that he’s thinking.

Antoine Cage

There was a misanthrope named Dan
of the Eagles he said was no fan
He was far from friendly
when caught in a Henley
and a playlist shuffling Witchy Woman

Gilles Bartape

There was a gassy man named Dan
whose passion for poop is gargantuan
he keeps a blog called the log
his GI distress the main dialogue
can I suggest a diet with more bran

Nobody cares.

There once was a douchebag named Lance,
A cheat with one ball in his pants.
For all the cycling no-namers,
And ride clean complainers,
He looks down on you as if you were ants.

Liam Ergopower

There once was a rouleur named Dan
Whose autumnal belly had turned to flan
He pledged to get fast
So he wouldn’t finish last
But got sick eating frosting from a can

Liam Ergopower

There once was a geezer called Dan
Who subsisted on marzipan
His sprint was missing
His farts were hissing
Getting sick wasn’t part of the plan

Wylie Brazeon

There once was a racer named Schmalz
Who danced on the pedals, not waltz’d
Obsessed with his bowel
He threw in the towel
Its aging that’s really at fault.

Simone Dropout

There once was a man named dieter
An nyvelocity reader
Registration’s next week!
Race fees i will tweak!
So Eli said f#ck it, I’ll be there

Diego Ceramic

There once was a cyclist named Schmalz,
Who ate corn on the cob,
But the burritos were nice,
Made of beans, chili, and rice,
And after, hot and stinky the bowl.

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