A Perfectly Rational Choice

Well, so much for spinning away the evening on the trainer. Between soccer, supper, dishes, Sparks, clean up and bedtime my spinning time was more like listening to screaming time.  If I could harness the energy of just one of my children, I could power a small city.

As I drove idled home this evening, stuck in Deerfoot’s rush-hour bumper-to-bumper crawl, I couldn’t help but notice that the average speed reported by my decrepit classic BMW’s trip computer was slightly lower than a decent bicycle commute.  I don’t see it happening this season, but I really must get geared up for the spring rains if I’m going to enjoy the full riding season Calgary offers.  I don’t see myself being one of those hearty few plowing away in the snow but…

I’ve previously pontificated on the pitfalls of never and this season I’m finding a few more I’d never do that positions falling by the wayside.  I said I wouldn’t be one of those Lycra-wearing riders, especially on a commute.  Wrong.  I’ll never wear Lycra bib shorts.  Wrong.  I’ll especially never wear Lycra bib shorts on a commute.  Wrong wrong wrong.  Point of fact – my (current) favourite cycling attire are my Shamu shorts, Rev. Duex.  I wear a shirt with them only because it’s cold and because really, nobody wants to see that, including me.  Can’t say I’ll never try it mind you.

One of the other things I thought I’d never do:  spend big money on a bicycle.  Let’s be honest, in the realm of bicycle performance, the present and likely always, limiting factor of my performance is not going to be the bicycle.  Building up a feather-weight Cervelo R5ca $10,000 frame would be akin to buying a Porsche GT2 RS so I could idle to and from work in first gear, nose-to-bumper.  Even worse, unlike the Porsche, the Cervelo doesn’t come with a matching engine.  The engine would be the same one currently found in the Rescue Bike – yours truly.  That’d be like putting the old worn out Previa engine in the Porsche.

My foolishness has boundaries.  Like the Cervelo S5.  Mamma – what a gorgeous bicycle, and from a Canadian company.  I know I know, Previa engine and all that, but I don’t care.  You know who I blame though?  Thomas.  Now Thomas doesn’t ride a Cervelo, nor does the shop he races under sell them, but it’s not just the bike.  Sure, the bike is a work of art but it was Thomas’ little introduction to speed the other day that cast the bait.  After our brief sprint – which was both over all together too fast and so painful I wanted to retch – he said “yeah, that’s what we do until we get to the sprint“, and at that moment, I wanted to do that too.  Speed, it’s not like a drug, it is the drug.  The drug.

Oh sure, I have a number of other things to do before I go out plonking down $4000 on a bicycle with a drivetrain geared so tall I can’t climb my own driveway with it.  Building up some power for one.  Shedding some load for another.  Check it – a rough calculation for me to ride at 40km/h on flat ground requires an output of 363 watts.  If I were to lose say 10 pounds of bicycle and another 20 pounds of rider, that factor falls…wait a minute.  This is entirely too nerdy.  This is not a formula-laden, techie blog – I’m not qualified to talk about that.  Suffice it to say, I have managed to convince myself that it is a good idea to buy a faster bike – something else I said I’d never do.  I also said I wouldn’t buy a bike without disc brakes…

So what does it all mean?  That despite all knowledge and logical conclusions, a beautiful work of art is irrationally attractive.  That ego and ignorance will lead you into dead ends where the only exit requires eating one’s words.  That despite one’s self-delusions of your rationality, you are still prone to irrational decisions.  Not to delve too far back into the nerdy side of things, but there’s a scientific basis for this conclusion.  Studies on people who have suffered trauma to their emotional centers in the brain, but who are functioning at 100% elsewhere, can not make a decision.  There’s no such thing as a purely logical decision as people without emotions literally can’t decide.  So what does that  mean?  That having a Cervelo in the stable makes sense!  Yay science!

The 2012 Cervelo S5. A perfect choice.