Calzone
Gear Whore #1
- Local time
- 12:18 PM
- Joined
- Nov 11, 2008
- Messages
- 16,953
- Location
- The Gateway To The Hudson Highlands
"Maggie" is in Saint Louis. She reported the city is crazed due to the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The Bruins won the game over the weekend.
So don't tell Maggie that I did a dumb thing and rode my Ti IBIS single speed up to within half a mile of Rockland Lake. Took me about three hours to get there and I was not that far from Bear Mountain State Park (within striking distance) when I took notice that my legs were kinda shot.
I wondered if I might have to call an UBER to get home because any serious hill pretty much killed me. Joe was correct: In Rockland County once you leave New Jersey and re-enter New York the hills get serious. Pretty much long climbs and descents where you can do 35-40 MPH. The ride home would be painful. Ouch.
On the way I explored Nyack and dead ended into Nyack Beach State Park. The dirt road was perhaps 10 feet above sea level right along the Hudson River. I had been to Nyack before (home of Edward Hooper the painter) for craft festivals while spending time with family. Didn't realize that it was such a historic town full of old Victorian houses.
I stopped at the Nyack Bakery to get a muffin and large coffee. I also refilled my water bottle, but the first serious climb south of Nyack was trouble for me; I could feel my legs seizing up; but I walked up the rest of that hill to avoid seizures.
Then it was divine intervention when I noticed a dirt trail. Parked cars denoted a trail head, and I inquired of where this trail headed. A cyclist told me it connected to Piedmont the next town and basically it pretty much was downhill. In fact it ended in town at an old unused train station that ran up the Hudson before the Tapanzee Bridge was built.
So I found a smooth descent that basically was an old railroad, so smooth and no rollers that saved me. At the train station I was able to get back on 9W. Had to walk a few hills to save my legs, but the trip home only took 2 1/2 hours, even though I had to walk because it pretty much was down hill.
So 5 1/2 hours in the saddle. It was dumb, but also cool. From racing one learns how far one can push themselves through pain and discomfort. I definitely flushed out my veins and my resting pulse was in the high 40's.
Developed a 2 liter tank of film. The HP5 looked great shot at 320 ISO in DDX 9 minutes with only 3 inversions per minute. When compared to Tri-X shot at 400 ISO in the same tank and from earlier developments, I say the Tri-X has a better midrange, but the HP5 has mucho highlight detail that is wonderful.
It will be interesting the Delta 400 shot at 320 ISO. I think my earlier shooting at 400 ISO and developing in DDX indicated that the DDX likes Delta 400 better than HP5.
These 135 experiments are really for 120 evaluation. For 35 mm I'm going Kodak 5222, although I still have mucho FP4 in 135 and 120.
On Saturday I went to Lawn-Guy-Land to visit Cris and Dave. My freind Bobby winds pickups and he gifted me a Tele neck pickup that has an open cover.
I installed this pickup in one of my Tele's and pretty much gets me into that "woofy" Strat sound of Hendrix "Wind Cries Mary" and the sound of Stevie Ray Vahn. Somehow it pairs well with this overwound bridge pickup from another maker. I'm in tone heaven.
So after three days off, "I come to work to rest."
Cal
So don't tell Maggie that I did a dumb thing and rode my Ti IBIS single speed up to within half a mile of Rockland Lake. Took me about three hours to get there and I was not that far from Bear Mountain State Park (within striking distance) when I took notice that my legs were kinda shot.
I wondered if I might have to call an UBER to get home because any serious hill pretty much killed me. Joe was correct: In Rockland County once you leave New Jersey and re-enter New York the hills get serious. Pretty much long climbs and descents where you can do 35-40 MPH. The ride home would be painful. Ouch.
On the way I explored Nyack and dead ended into Nyack Beach State Park. The dirt road was perhaps 10 feet above sea level right along the Hudson River. I had been to Nyack before (home of Edward Hooper the painter) for craft festivals while spending time with family. Didn't realize that it was such a historic town full of old Victorian houses.
I stopped at the Nyack Bakery to get a muffin and large coffee. I also refilled my water bottle, but the first serious climb south of Nyack was trouble for me; I could feel my legs seizing up; but I walked up the rest of that hill to avoid seizures.
Then it was divine intervention when I noticed a dirt trail. Parked cars denoted a trail head, and I inquired of where this trail headed. A cyclist told me it connected to Piedmont the next town and basically it pretty much was downhill. In fact it ended in town at an old unused train station that ran up the Hudson before the Tapanzee Bridge was built.
So I found a smooth descent that basically was an old railroad, so smooth and no rollers that saved me. At the train station I was able to get back on 9W. Had to walk a few hills to save my legs, but the trip home only took 2 1/2 hours, even though I had to walk because it pretty much was down hill.
So 5 1/2 hours in the saddle. It was dumb, but also cool. From racing one learns how far one can push themselves through pain and discomfort. I definitely flushed out my veins and my resting pulse was in the high 40's.
Developed a 2 liter tank of film. The HP5 looked great shot at 320 ISO in DDX 9 minutes with only 3 inversions per minute. When compared to Tri-X shot at 400 ISO in the same tank and from earlier developments, I say the Tri-X has a better midrange, but the HP5 has mucho highlight detail that is wonderful.
It will be interesting the Delta 400 shot at 320 ISO. I think my earlier shooting at 400 ISO and developing in DDX indicated that the DDX likes Delta 400 better than HP5.
These 135 experiments are really for 120 evaluation. For 35 mm I'm going Kodak 5222, although I still have mucho FP4 in 135 and 120.
On Saturday I went to Lawn-Guy-Land to visit Cris and Dave. My freind Bobby winds pickups and he gifted me a Tele neck pickup that has an open cover.
I installed this pickup in one of my Tele's and pretty much gets me into that "woofy" Strat sound of Hendrix "Wind Cries Mary" and the sound of Stevie Ray Vahn. Somehow it pairs well with this overwound bridge pickup from another maker. I'm in tone heaven.
So after three days off, "I come to work to rest."
Cal