Documenting Jamie & Amy Britt's participation in the 2012 NYC-DC Climate Ride. Train. Fundraise. Ride. Blog.
Monday, April 30, 2012
We Are Selling Merch! -- by Amy
My wonderful cousin, Brynn Conapitski, designed this for us. Our fundraising deadline is approaching, and we have not raised enough money to be able to go on the ride. So, we're improvising and selling merch.
For $10, you can buy a magnet. For $35, you can buy a t-shirt or a coffee mug! And, 100% of your donation is still tax-deductible and still goes toward doing really good things for the planet. Most of all, it helps Jamie and I raise enough money to go on the Climate Ride.
To order, just go to one of our donation pages (http://climateride.donordrive.com/participant/amybritt or http://climateride.donordrive.com/participant/jamiebritt) and donate. You will have a chance to enter a comment, so just write in which type of merch you want. We will gather everyone's t-shirt sizes when we are ready to order.
We hope that some of you who have already donated will consider buying a t-shirt or magnet or mug. We don't have much time left, and we need your help!
Saturday, April 28, 2012
Done!
I swear the last 8 miles was all hills, plus there was some hail in the last mile, but we made it! And we got back in time for the refreshments! (veggie burgers!)
At the winery!
Last rest stop. 8 miles to go. So. Many. Hills.
30 miles in.
Just split off onto 48 mile loop. Not enough time to do 63 and get back by 3.
End Hunger Ride - by Amy
We are in the car and headed to Calvert County! It is too early!
I can think of two challenges we will face today: the time limit and the cold. We will have about 7 hours to finish the metric century, so we will have to keep a good pace. And it is 38 degrees outside! It is almost May. Climate change makes weird weather, and weird weather sucks.
We will let you know how it's going. If we are too slow, we will split off for one of the shorter rides. Stay tuned...
Friday, April 27, 2012
Is this thing on? - by Jamie
Testing. Testing. I'm writing this post from my phone. Because that's how we'll blog from Climate Ride. And that's how I'll blog tomorrow from the Ride to End Hunger in Calvert County.
That's right. Tomorrow we take on our first organized ride. We're shooting for the "metric century" - aka 63 miles. But there all also shorter routes we can peel off onto.
Wish us luck, and check in tomorrow to follow our progress.
Let's ride!
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Other Riders! - by Amy
1. Another blog like this one! Written by a chemistry professor from New Jersey. http://climateride-round2.blogspot.com/ . I'm looking foward to meeting him on the ride!
2. An interview with Ben Sollee which reveals that Climate Ride will be part of his 2012 tour. http://www.gratefulweb.com/articles/ben-sollee-live-album-summer-tour . How cool is that?!? What's more, the crazy dude is going to play a show in DC the night we arrive. Nuts! But awesome!
Sunday, April 22, 2012
The Bike Bug - by Amy
I had certainly forgotten. Before we signed up for Climate Ride, the last times I had ridden a bike were to get to the MARC station for my commute. Riding uphill at 6 a.m. on your way to work tends to make you focus on things other than the sheer joy of riding.
Once we started training, I remembered -- bike riding is awesome! You go fast! You see interesting things! You get exercise!
My mother came to visit toward the end of March. She agreed to go on a training ride with me and Ray, asking only that I not go too fast.
My mother, flying down the Odenton trails. |
After she went home, she and my Dad realized that they had separately become re-interested in biking. A few weeks and some dollars later, my parents own two new bikes and have done two different rides of 10+ miles.
The bike bug is contagious!
One of the coolest things about Jamie and I deciding to take on this challenge is that we are now equipped for family bike rides. Without Climate Ride as an incentive, we would never have spent the money on a second bike and a trailer, but since we did, we have been having a blast on rides with the kids. Now my parents are biking and getting exercise together in their sixties.
This experience is a gift that will continue to pay off far into the future. Now that it is spring, I have started thinking about which errands I could safely run with Ray in the trailer. This time, my case of the bike bug might be chronic!
Although our training has shown more rewards than we could have ever hoped, we very badly want to go on the actual Climate Ride! And to do that, we need to raise more money. Today is Earth Day -- if you haven't already done anything for the planet, can you donate $5 or $10 to help us AND the planet? Links are http://climateride.donordrive.com/participant/amybritt and http://climateride.donordrive.com/participant/jamiebritt.
Happy cycling!
Friday, April 20, 2012
Creative Training - by Jamie
The closer we get to the ride, the tougher it seems to be to get in as much riding as I originally envisioned in our training plan. This is, unfortunately, somewhat opposite of what should be happening. As a result, we've had to get a little creative to keep ourselves in shape even when Amy and I can't get on the bike trail together and do a few hours of riding. Here are a few of the stop-gap training measures that we've employed:
Round and Round
In our original vision, our long rides were going to be on some of the great trails that we have nearby, such as the BWI Loop that does a 12-mile circuit around the Baltimore Washington International Airport, or the Baltimore-Annapolis trail that runs, as you might expect, from Baltimore to Annapolis (or nearly so). However, packing up the bikes and getting to those places eats up time, and time seems to be at a premium these days, what with our son playing baseball now and other warm-weather family activities coming into the picture.
So, the other day I did a 31-mile bike ride around the neighborhood. Literally "around." There's a good 5-mile circular loop with some nice ups and downs that I just kept doing, with an additional trip down and back on the one long, straight trail that runs 4 miles north-south through the neighborhood to break things up. Got a little repetitive at the end, which isn't great for morale, but you do what you gotta do.
Divide and Conquer
Part of our plan for Climate Ride has been to train and ride together--a fun shared adventure. But as time has gotten compressed, and the need for longer rides has come upon us, Amy and I have had to sacrifice a little of the togetherness on our training rides. We'll do part of a ride together, pulling Ray in the trailer, but then one of us will break off and head home with the little guy so that he doesn't throw a fit over spending hours strapped into his "bike choo-choo". Meanwhile, the other biker continues on to get some more miles in.
This past week all three children were with us and we did a divide-and-conquer ride as a family of five. Jarod started a game where we had to think of animals that had other animals in the name (sea horse! sheep dog! elephant seal!), and we had a blast. After six and a half miles, Natalie, Ray, and I dropped off at home so that Amy could do some additional training. Jarod opted to join her, so the two of them got some quality bonding time on their bikes, and Natalie spent time playing with her baby brother while I prepared dinner. It worked out nicely all around, and it even wore out Jarod!
At some point we may go even farther down this path, with one of us starting off alone while the other is home with our son. Then after an hour or two, we all join up for a nice together-portion of the ride. After that, the cyclist who started alone goes home with our son while the second cyclist finishes off another hour or two of training. Not ideal, and spreads things out over a good chunk of the day.
Also along the divide-and-conquer line, Amy has started doing some rides during the day while I'm at work. That's great for her, but leaves me needing a way to keep up with my conditioning.
Stairing into the Abyss
My most creative training technique has been to take a 20-30 minute break at work and go up and down the stairs in my office building. Without a gym membership (or time to use one even if I had it), and with flat feet and bad knees that make running a poor option, I don't have a lot of options for exercise during the workday. However, I do work in a four-story building that has a fairly large number of stairs between each floor. I've managed to create a circuit up and down those stairs, as well as across the floors of the building. There are stairwells at all four corners of the building, so I have several options for how to go from one 4-story climb to the next. Another good thing about the stair climbing is it is good for the leg muscles that are important to biking (or so I tell myself).
Since I started the stair routine, I've worked up to going up and down the 4-story height of the building 8 times, plus a warm-up in the beginning that slowly gets me from bottom to top and then back down. For those who keeping count, that's 36 floors of stair climbing. Though it's not all 36 in one straight shot, it's still quite an accomplishment for me. And I think I've only gotten one weird look from someone who saw me get to the bottom of the stairwell and then turn around to go back up.
Sometimes, though, you just gotta ride
Soon we'll be doing our first full-day ride. On April 28, we're going to do the Ride to End Hunger in Calvert County. The event has several loops of different lengths, but we'll be doing the big one: the metric century. That's 100 km (or 63 miles for those still on the English system of units). I'm told it's got a goodly number of hills, but that's ok. So do our neighborhood bike trails. Seriously--I mapped the neighborhood trails with Runkeeper, and then compared elevation changes to those posted online for the Calvert Country event loops. Our neighborhood actually has some bigger hills, just not as many of them. Well, maybe there would be if I did 63 miles on that 5-mile loop. Anyway, I think we'll be ready enough.
So that's where we're at now. Only four more weeks to go until the mighty Climate Ride. One way or another, we'll be ready for it.
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
The Scary Chart - by Jamie
I work for NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center. Earth science is a huge part of what we do as a NASA center. For the past seven years or so, I have been working on ICESat-2, a mission to measure changes in the Earth's ice sheets and sea ice. We're a piece of the climate science puzzle. One of the cool things about working on these kinds of projects is getting to listen to the scientists talk about their work and sit in on their presentations. I get to know them as people and hear about what they've learned and what they still hope to learn. It's pretty awesome. I hadn't been on ICESat-2 for very long before I ran into what I have come to call "The Scary Chart."
A version of The Scary Chart is shown above. The graph shows, in crude terms, "amount of sea ice" on the vertical axis versus "year" on the bottom axis. The blue area shows how different models have been predicting the decline of sea ice over time. I think there are a little over a dozen models represented. The black line is the average of all those models. The red line shows the actual observations of how sea ice has been declining (some of that data provided from our predecessor mission, the first ICESat).
What makes this chart so scary? It's not just that sea ice is decreasing. No, it turns out all of the climate models we have are underestimating how fast the planet is losing sea ice. This climate change thing is real, and the more data we get, the worse things look.
Of course, there's always variations of the "hockey stick" graph, which probably get more airplay as scary charts:
But for some reason The Scary Chart about sea ice gets me more. I think it's the "we can't even be sure yet that it's only this bad" aspect of it. Also maybe because I first experienced it in a personal setting, presented to me by people that I knew personally and trusted, people who have integrity and are damn-smart scientists.
Now, this is by no means intended to be a post in which I use data and well-reasoned arguments to illustrate the reality of climate change. Smarter people do that much better elsewhere on the web, and besides, that's not what this blog is about. My real point is to relay a personal experience: the first time I saw The Scary Chart, I thought to myself, "holy crap." Climate change has been a much bigger concern of mine ever since.
Since being exposed to The Scary Chart, I have stopped driving my car to work. I take the train and bus instead. I have become a vegetarian, in no small part because it reduces my carbon footprint (look it up: www.pbjcampaign.org). I recycle more. I compost. I eat more organic/sustainably-grown foods.
And now I'm going to bike 300 miles in Climate Ride. This is why I ride.
One easy thing that you could do is help me ride. All donations to Climate Ride are tax-deductible and go toward organizations that promote sustainable solutions for the planet. You can donate toward my goal (http://climateride.donordrive.com/participant/jamiebritt) or Amy's (http://climateride.donordrive.com/participant/amybritt) or both.
Special shout-outs to Waleed Abdalati, Jay Zwally, Thorsten Markus, and Tom Neumann, the ICESat-2 scientists who have taught me most of what I know about cryospheric science (that's "science about the icy parts of the world", for those of us non-scientists).