Author Archives: papish

Day 1: Berlin to Luckenwalde, Germany


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Start: Berlin, Germany
End: Luckenwalde, Germany
Distance: 63.1km
Elevation Gain: 1164ft
Elevation Loss: 773ft
Time: 5h45m
Reading Material: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao – Junot Diaz
Audio Material: Diane Rehm’s Friday News Roundup (Domestic & International)

Description
A beautiful day to begin. Our discontented winter is over and hopefully spring brings something better. With a latte (on the house) and a Chemex (for the road) from my new friends at Bonanza Coffee Heroes, we’re off.

The first 15km was spent mainly getting out of Berlin. The fully-loaded bike actually handles quite well, but you still have to move slow and deliberate in city traffic–much different than weaving lanes on a fixie in Cambridge. I won’t lie: spirits were low as I battled the last of Berlin traffic. My right knee had begun to act up, and I wasn’t able to enjoy the ride with so many potential dangers to track. A quick rest on a small patch of green in front of a Lidle and then, finally, the open road.

My mood immediately improved with empty blacktop (and 400mg of Ibuprofen coursing through the system). The remainder of the leg alternated on low-traffic two lane road and a nice, meandering paved bike path which tracked the B101 highway. Relying on Google Map directions, I did need to portage some railroad tracks, but otherwise the route was excellent. My favorite was when the road entered small towns (e.g Trebbin) and I got a few spins on some cobblestone.

My knee improved, as well. Keeping the right foot uncleated and spinning in a low gear at a constant speed helped. The last 30km was blissful with the dulcet sounds of Diane Rehm (say what you will about her voice, but she’s really the most balanced host NPR features) in my ear, I was finally able to settle into the ride. I think the knee should be fine and current plan is to try and lower the saddle a smidge and see if I can cleat without issue.

Decided to get my road legs under me early in the trip and opted for a hotel in Luckenwalde for the night instead of a field. Dinner was Italian at an Indian/Italian (also gyros!) restaurant. The town is old, beautiful and deserted. I leave you with the following descriptive prose from Luckenwalde’s wikipedia page:

In 1923, architect Erich Mendelsohn erected the Herrmann hat factory, a milestone of Expressionist architecture. During WW2, there was a Stalag for prisoners of war (Stalag IIIa). There was also a work camp for civilians. Nazis forced people to work for their war effort, else the families of people who worked there would perish. Lack of food and hard work killed thousands of them. Among them were Poles, Italians, French and many more. There were several places in town and around it where they worked. After the Russians showed up to liberate the camp, American POW’s ventured into town to to find Russians raping and killing, hanging women and children out of windows. German girls went to the Gi’s for protection and the Russians did not bother the girls when they were with them. But after feeling threatened by the Russians who had the guns they left town and headed back to camp. When they got there the fences were back up and they were now prisoners of the Russians. The Russians asked for name rank and serial number but the Gi’s refused telling the Russians they were comrades and should not be treated as prisoners. [AR15.com]

A framing exercise:

Doctor Spielvogel, it alleviates nothing fixing the blame— blaming is still ailing, of course, of course— but nonetheless, what was it with these Jewish parents, what, that they were able to make us little Jewish boys believe ourselves to be princes on the one hand, unique as unicorns on the one hand, geniuses and brilliant like nobody has ever been brilliant and beautiful before in the history of childhood— saviors and sheer perfection on the one hand, and such bumbling, incompetent, thoughtless, helpless, selfish, evil little shits, little ingrates, on the other!

“But in Europe where—?” he calls after me, as the taxi pulls away from the curb. “I don’t know where,” I call after him, gleefully waving farewell. I am thirty-three, and free at last of my mother and father! For a month.

gear

Gear Porn

Here’s a fairly detailed list of all the gear as of 20130414:

Bicycle
Co-motion Pangea bicycle
Brooks B17 saddle
Tubus racks
Topeak Road Morph tire pump
AxeDefender immobilizer lock
Double-leg kickstand
Shimano SPD pedals
Fenders
MSR 30oz fuel bottle
Water bottle
Son28 Dynamo hub (front)
ToutTerrain Plug II USB inverter (powered by dynamo)
B&M Luxos Headlight (powered by dynamo)
Taillight (battery powered)
several bungees for rear rack
Sigma 2209 wireless cyclocomputer
RAM handlebar mounts for gps/phone
heavy-duty chain and padlock

Bicycle Repair kit
Leatherman Wave tool
multi-tool
allen wrench
adjustable wrench
S&S coupler wrench/pedal wrench
tire levers
tube puncture repair kit
folding 26×1.5 tire
3 extra tubes
Prolink chain lube
Finishline lube for couplers
Brooks Saddle proofide
Stein mini cassette lockring for emergency chain repair
Emergency spoke splint kit
duck tape
assorted extra screws, nuts, zipties, etc

Luggage
2x Ortlieb Sport Packer Plus panniers (front)
2x Ortlieb Bike Packer Plus panniers (rear)
Ortlieb Rack Pack duffel (31L, back rack)
Ortlieb Ultimate 5 handlebar bag
BaileyWorks small messenger bag w/ MediaUnbound logo (city use)

Electronics
Garmin Oregon 450 GPS
Nexus 4 phone
PedalPower+ v4i battery pack (buffer dynamo to USB)
Macbook Air 11″
Kindle Paperwhite
1TB portable drive
Voltaic Fuse 10W solar charger
router (dd-wrt)
headphones
Jambox mini
Casio el cheapo watch
Eneloop rechargeable batteries (8xAAA, 8XAA)
USB portable batter charger
extra batteries for cyclometer
assorted adapters, cords, etc

Camera Gear
Nikon D7100 w/ 18-300mm lens
Sigma 10-20mm wide angle lens
cleaning kit
portable battery charger
1 extra EL-15 battery

Cycling Clothes
2x Icebreaker underwear
Base layer long underwear & top
2x Cycling shirts
2x Chamois liners (bib style & elastic)
MTB shorts
2x socks (short & long)
Keen Arroyo cycling shoe and cleats
2x gloves (fingerless & warm)
Earwarmer
Helmet
Cycling cap
Project Rudy sunglasses + extra lenses

City Clothes
underwear
long pants (zipper convertible)
collar shirt (merino wool)
t-shirt (merino wool)
Hoodie

Camping Clothes
wool hat
flannel pants
ultralight down jacket
softshell jacket

Camping Gear
Hilleberg Anjan 2 tent
tent ground sheet
Western Mountaineering sleeping bag
Thermarest NeoAir sleeping pad
wilderness med kit
pack towel
bandanas
Reef flip flops
carabiners, rope, sling fasteners
compass
pack trowel

Kitchen
1L Nalgene
4L Platypus water bag
Reliance Camp water storage unit
1 travel flask currently filled with Lavagulin 16yr whiskey
MSR Whiserplite Universal stove
MSR expedition stove repair kit
GSI collapsible coffee pourover
Titanium mug
2L titanium pot
Titanium sporks
Titanium frying pan
spatula, spoon
potholder
Aquamira water treatment drops
olive oil
salt, pepper, chili pepper
coffee filters
lighters, waterproof matches, firestarter

Toiletries (sunscreen, toothpaste, dr bronner’s soap, etc)
Six-month supply contact lenses
Guidebooks (Germany, Eastern Europe, Ukraine, Russia)
stuff sacks to organize everything

Weights
Bike (and items attached): 40.4lbs
Gear (no food/consumables): 87.4lbs

Total: 130.8lbs

20130411_0435_DSC_0102_resized50

Day 0.1: Berlin to Potsdam


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Start: Berlin, Germany
End: Potsdam, Germany
Distance: 42.3km
Elevation Gain: 1195ft
Time: 4h53m
Reading Material: Portnoy’s Complaint – Philip Roth

Description
Just a day trip from Berlin to Potsdam to check out the bike and get a sense of the road. I followed a part of the Euro Cycling route R1 (aka German Route D3) which hits a number of iconic spots in Berlin (Brandenburg Gate, Reichstag, Olympic Stadium) before heading west through a forest and lake region and terminating in Potsdam proper. Cycling is mostly on urban bike lanes before hitting a nice 20km stretch of winding forest roads that reminded me of Vermont spring rides. I passed (or more appropriately, was passed by) many road weenie cyclists including a mini-Peloton.

As you’ll see in the photos, the weather was overcast and rainy. A constant drizzle had me soaked by the time I reached the outskirts of Potsdam and needed to dry off for a hot lunch. Then, to Sanssouci Park and a tour of Frederick the Great’s Palace.

Seeing as it was getting late and wet (and I began developing some lateral knee pain which will need to be carefully monitored), I opted for a train back to Berlin Hbf. Of course, as soon as I stepped on the train platform, the sun peeked out for the first time that day.