Sunday, February 1, 2026

In Which a Memorial Ride Caps January

Sign on bicycle
Sign another biker had on her bicycle for Jan. 31 ride.

Well, January 2026 is over. Last year, due to my heart surgery on Jan. 10, I rode no miles at all in the first month of the year. This year, weather was definitely an issue, as I managed only eight rides for the entire month.

Well, that’s about two rides a week. In the dead of a cold winter, perhaps that’s not bad. And I did roll for more than 100 miles in January.

Most of my rides were typical of my style of riding. I usually roll alone. I do not mind company, but I don’t always plan rides well in advance. And, while I enjoy a ride with others, I am also a bit of an introvert and don’t abhor some alone time.

The most memorable ride was the final one on Jan. 31. A local bike shop, Goldfinch Cyclery, joined with a national movement by planning a “We in Unity (For All for Alex)” ride to remember Alex Pretti and other victims of ICE violence.

Ellis Park Harbor with bikes
Bikes parked at Ellis Park Harbor, west end of the ride, Jan. 31.

I did not know the route in detail, but from notes on Facebook I knew that it would be a short ride. I was toying with the idea of riding my trike—it’s my main cycling vehicle these days. But it is a very cold January, and I did not know how it would feel to wear my uninsulated biking shoes for this ride.

So, I did a test ride on Jan. 29. I put on three pairs of socks—a thin inner pair, regular exercise socks and a top layer of fluffy winter socks. I had on long underwear, an insulated shirt, long-sleeved T and sweatshirt under my biking jacket. In other words, pretty much the full winter regalia.

The temperature was in the teens Thursday, and there was a bit of a breeze. I headed up C Avenue to the Lindale Trail. There, I got a nasty surprise—the city has been doing good work clearing local trails, but hadn’t cleared the latest light snowfall, so the trail featured a thin, bumpy packed layer of snow.

Lindale Trail
Jan. 29 ride on Lindale Trail to practice for Jan. 31 memorial ride. Headed east on trail--you can see exactly where Cedar Rapids (no snow from latest fall removed) ends and Marion (snow cleared) begins. I hope Cedar Rapids will do better in the future.

I rode for about an hour, and was suffering a bit by the end. The verdict: Even with three pairs of socks, the bike shoes are not adequate a cold winter ride. Even my legs were cold by the end of the practice ride, which surprised me because in the past long underwear under my pants had been enough to keep my legs comfortable. Well, every day I grow older, and I know that my sensitivity to cold is more of an issue as I age than it was in the past.

That was Thursday the 29th. What to do for Saturday the 31st? On the one hand, a bicycle would allow me to wear warm winter boots. On the other hand, if I were to encounter a snow-covered section on the ride route, I would prefer three wheels to two. In the end, I decided that the downtown bike routes would be more likely to be clear than my neighborhood trail, and for the sake of comfort, I would wear the warm boots.

I made other adjustments, too. I again wore insulated long underwear but also a thin pair of pajama pants under my regular trousers. I added a regular T shirt under the three other torso covers, and chose a zip fleecy rather than a sweatshirt for the top under-coat layer. I felt a little bit like I was the younger brother in “A Christmas Story,” yet I was warmer.

Normally, if I were to ride downtown, I would cycle there, but this day, unsure of my cold endurance, I loaded the bicycle into my van and drove to the start of the ride. I got there a bit early, and by the advertised arrival time of 1 p.m., only seven of us waited in the cold. But it was half an hour before the ride was set to start, and in that time a steady stream of bikers arrived. I counted at least 70 people in a quick look at the crowd before the ride, and I think there were a few more than that.

Before the ride, Logan from the bike shop said a few words. He spoke well. Biking means freedom, and recent tragedies have been an attack on freedom (my words, not his). I won’t get more into my feelings on this biking blog, but I did write a post on this to topic on another of my blogs.

Speaker before bike ride
Speaker from bike shop talks before ride Jan. 31.

After the short speech, we started out from Plaza Park where the big red Cedar Rapids sign is, headed down to First Street and headed west, aiming after several blocks on a bike lane to a bike tail which would take us to Ellis Boulevard, and then to Ellis Park.

The wind was cold and my face was in slight discomfort. But it was not quite as cold as the day of my practice ride—and I had more layers on. That strategy seemed to work. When I arrived at Ellis Park Harbor, near the end of the line of bikers (no surprise, I am a slow rider), I was doing fine.

Well, I do not know if the right word was “fine,” given the reason for the ride. I mean I was doing physically well. We milled about for a few minutes, in quiet conversation or alone with our thoughts, and then headed back to the starting point.

Flag on bike
Custom flag on another bike seen before Jan. 31 ride.

I think the choice to ride the bike was a good one. There were a few spots with snow and ice, and I was on my road bike, but I just rolled across them. Overall, the pavement was clear, much clearer here than on the Lindale Trail. I was glad to be on the bike for several reasons. The main one was the warm boots. Also, the ride was at times on a narrow walkway or bike lane, and the bike was better for those places just because it takes less space than my trike. And while I was near the end of the ride both coming and going, I am sure I did a better job keeping up with the pack riding my fastest bicycle than I would have on the tricycle.

As noted, I do enjoy a ride by myself. But a memorial ride like this is meant for a group. It helps to know that there are others who mourn the unexpected loss of a biker and a nurse and others—that decent people will gather publicly on this winter day in remembrance.

In January, I rode 108.8 miles, 14.66 on bicycles and 94.14 miles on my trike. The final six are the ones that will stick with me the most. Thanks, Goldfinch Cyclery, for this event.

New bridge
Image from Jan. 9 trike ride. A new bike-pedestrian bridge across the Cedar River is taking shape, built on the foundations of an old railroad bridge.


Tuesday, January 6, 2026

In Which I Summarize and Seek a Name

 

Flags on trike seen on bike trail
Pretty late afternoon winter sun shines on the visibility flags of my tricycle as I pause on a ride Dec. 20, 2025, along the Krumholtz Trail in Marion, Iowa.

We’re about a week into the new year of 2026. I want to look back a bit on 2025 and then look ahead.

I’m not big on New Years resolutions—I don’t dislike the practice, I’m sure setting measurable goals are a good motivator for many people, but it’s just not the way my brain works. And in my biking life, unexpected events derailed my last attempt to attain a goal. At the start of 2024, I noted on this blog that I had ridden 2,954 miles in 2023, and stated that I wanted to top 3,500 in 2024.

Here's what I wrote in January, 2024: “In 2023, I rode 3,346.22 (miles), I’m sure a modest milage total for serious bikers, but a slight increase in annual miles for me. In 2024, I’m setting a goal of 3,500 miles. I’m still working (I retire in spring, 2025), and I hope that my bike miles will go way up in 2025, but a 50-mile increase from 2023 to 2024 seems doable, I hope. Maybe 4,000 in 2025? We’ll see.”

What we saw was a math-challenged rider who didn’t reach his goals. For various reasons, it wasn’t possible for me to ride RAGBRAI in 2024 or 2025, which cut my miles. And, as 2024 went on, I started to develop troubling symptoms—dizziness and chest pressure—that led me to limit longer rides as the year was coming to a close. Late in the year, I saw a heart doctor, who declared me temporarily unfit for biking for a time, until I had a heart bypass operation in January of last year.

So, instead of increasing my miles in 2024 and 2025, I actually rolled fewer miles—2,954 in 2024 and 1,843 in 2025 (1,842.7, to be more precise, but I’m rounding the other years to whole numbers).

Chart showing montly biking miles in 2025
From a spreadsheet I keep in my Google Drive (yes, I am that nerdy), my monthly mile totals riding bikes and my trike in 2025. Note the huge spike in September--I was given a new tricycle for my birthday in late August. Rides slowed down after that due to both a two-week trip in October and bad December weather, but maybe September shows the potential for more future miles.

I have decided that I am not setting a mileage goal for 2026. Instead, I’m going to recognize that I’m at a point in life where I don’t need to prove anything to myself or anyone else, and I want to just do what I enjoy. I’m retired now, I have no career mountain to climb, and I want to roll across the planet as much I am comfortable doing, enjoying myself and being grateful for each healthy day and each mile I can roll.

I would be lying to say I don’t hope to exceed my 2025 total miles, I just am saying I will roll what I can and try to be content with and grateful for that.

A big reason that I rode less in 2025 was that it was a truncated biking year for me. My miles in January and February were zero due to my medical adventures. It took about half the year for me to rebuild my biking ability—in fact, an irregular heartbeat post-surgery entailed a follow-up heart procedure in July, and while I did start riding my bikes again in March, it wasn’t until after the July correction of that irregular beat that I really started riding in earnest.

Report on a trike riding adventure:We had heavy snow in late November, and on Dec. 9 I rode my tricycle on the Boyson Trail. It was mostly clear (kudos to the City of Marion, they do a great job clearing snow off of recreational trails). But near the McGrath VW dealership, snow had been pushed off of their parking lot onto the Boyson Trail. I tried to trike around it, but tipped on the edge of snow mountain. I was going very slowly, neither me nor my trike were harmed, but I did file a complaint with the dealership via their web page. To their credit, they quickly answered back and said that they would clear the snow that they had put on the trail. Below, the same stretch of trail seen during my Dec. 20 trike ride on the same trail. The trail is clear.

Due to my surgery, to encourage my continued rolling adventures, my children and my wife conspired to buy me a recumbent tricycle for my 67th birthday—so the nature of my rolling has shifted. The tricycle is heavier than a bicycle, but also sturdier and more stable.

It remains to be seen what the trike will mean for my miles in 2026—yet another reason I’m not setting a specific mileage total goal.

To what do I aspire to ride in 2026? Mainly, to continue rolling and to enjoy the journey. I want to meet the rest of Team Joe and family in central Iowa sometime, and do my first twilight trike ride along the High Trestle Trail. Maybe this year, I can gather some children and grandchildren and enjoy a family trail trike and bike adventure. I would like to visit more regional parks in 2026, now that my wife and I are both retired, and hopefully we can bring some bikes along for some rides at those places.

CR Biker on final ride of 2025. Too cold that day for the trike, but I enjoyed a ride along the Grant Wood Trail leading east of Marion. Wasn't sure of the conditions so I rode The Fancy Beast--the trail was mostly clear but there were a few snowy spots, so it wasn't a poor choice.

Deer seen by Grant Wood Trail on Dec. 31, 2025, bike ride.

Rode my hybrid bike (too cold for trike) Dec. 21 to Cedar Lake. The trail system around the lake is being extended, this is a yet unopened new stretch of trail on the east side of the lake.

Clarence, my hybrid bike, at Cedar Lake Dec. 21.

Tricycle parked on Krumholtz Trail during Dec. 20 ride. What should this trike be named?

Snow on park field beside the Boyson Trail Dec. 20. December got a bit warmer at the end and much of the snowpack had melted by this point, but there were still places blanketed in pretty white.

Winter sun over creek at east end of Krumholtz Trail, Dec. 20 trike ride.

Most of all, I just want to spend pretty days rolling along, enjoying this still gorgeous planet from the seats of my trike and my bikes. Weather has limited my miles so far in 2026, but in the first six days I’ve done three rides—two on bikes and one on the trike, although the trike is beating the bikes in total miles (8.46 miles on two chilly, short bike rides; 16.64 trike miles from yesterday, a warmer day).

The bikes have been a bit of a mixed lot lately. I planned to ride my hybrid bike, Clarence, a few days ago, for example, but discovered a broken pedal. Then, I was going to swap it for my old mountain bike, The Fancy Beast, but it had a flat tyre. Thus, my most recent bicycle ride was on my road bike, Argent, even though I do not commonly ride that bicycle a lot in winter.

2026 is starting with some challenges--a flat tyre on The Fancy Beast and this broken pedal on Clarence.

Whatever. I am limited in trike rides by the fact that the pedals on my tricycle require biking shoes, and the specialized pieces of cycling foot gear that I own are definitely not fit for cold. It was lucky that it was warm enough Monday for those 16 plus trike miles, and it looks like I may be lucky and trike again tomorrow, which will be nice.

Finally, I get down to some real business. I have homework for you, dear reader: a little poll. I would appreciate the hive mind’s input on a question my new status as a tricycle rider raises.

I have habit of naming my bicycles, and I want to honor my new tricycle with a moniker.

My tricycle as I pause to eat a snack at Cedar Lake during Jan. 5 ride. What should I name this vehicle?

What should the trike be named? I posed the question on a Facebook image from a recent ride. The suggestions I received didn’t yet resonate with me. One person suggested “Bart” because he thought maps of my recent rides looked like I was frequently drawing a character from the Simpsons TV show. I haven’t watched that show much, however, and I don’t feel like using the name of a fictional personality I don’t know much about. One of my sisters suggested “the Martian” because the invaders in War of the Worlds used tripods. I am amused by that idea, and maybe if the trike was green I might go that way—but it’s not. The trike is blue, and space invaders are little green beasts, not blue meanies.

And yes, I’m a Beatles fan, and yes, “Blue Meanie” has potential, except it does not quite fit the personality of this sturdy steed.

So, what should it be, blog pals? That’s the really important issue for 2026—the key goal I can accomplish soon, with your help. Let’s play a game: Name that trike.

Please comment your suggestion on this blog (or in a comment on Facebook if you see a link to this post there). It’s not an election—your humble correspondent is the Task Master and full decider in this event—but I would appreciate your ideas.