Biking

Von Basel nach Zürich

I woke up excited, as I was finally going to attempt biking all the way to Zurich today. Still not sure about being able to properly fix a puncture, but not really caring. My philosophy is that experiencing a puncture in Switzerland is probably safer than driving a car in Italy including seatbelt and full-face helmet. And so, speaking of bursting, I stuffed myself with oats, peanut butter, and berries, filled my water bottle and put on my special bike earrings and covered my limbs with sunscreen. With my Garmin route all set, I carried my bike down all four floors to a post-apocalyptically deserted street —there's nothing like cycling on a Sunday.

The real fun started past Laufenburg. I’ve found that biking east, it takes about two whole hours to leave the fugly industrial flair of Basel’s periphery, and step into more scenic landscapes.
But then, the climb past Fricktal caught me off guard (not really, since Garmin did warn me over and over and over. More in an emotional sense). With an 800m ascent at up to 13° steepness, I missed the feeling of going uphill with cleats, but not enough to risk another extracurricular visit to the Unispital. Once I reached the top of the hill, I stopped briefly, with a light tinnitus in my ears and an unsettling brightness before my eyes. Switzerland might be safe when it comes to punctures, but I don’t know about passing out alone in the middle of the road at 178 bpm. Still, we all know what will happen. Just like with a tough birth, I will forget the pain soon enough and repeat the experience before one can say "Bewusstlosigkeit".

Following the GPS, I managed to complete the 94km route in under five hours moving time. Past Laufenburg, it was pleasant enough, but I couldn’t help remembering last week’s kayaking near Interlaken, or my recent visit to Lake Léman. Despite my self-diagnosed fissural cartilage damage in the lateral face of my borderline lateralized left patella due to my 5am 10k morning runs in the winter (obviously too proud to feel as dumb as I should), I am excited and motivated to look for newer routes near water, possibly, or even ideally, in places I’ve never been before.

The hour-long ICE ride back felt like a lullaby embracing my tired, soon to be stiff body, which I struggled to keep awake. Only the fear of ending up in Hamburg when I'm actually expected at the geriatric hospital at 8 am sharp tomorrow morning, combined with the music in my ears, kept me awake (as a side note, I still don’t know what it is about me and country music. It moves me so deeply, yet I don’t own a truck, I don’t drink beer, and I have never seen the night sky in Alabama).

Anyways. Another successful new biking milestone completed, and another challenge I have proven myself capable of conquering without becoming (fully) unconscious.

100

Even though tomorrow I might have to wheel myself to work in a wheelchair, it was worth it. My neck hurts, my legs feel like Jell-O, my arms look like chicken wings (ironic from a Canarian woman in Switzerland), and I could fall asleep on my laptop any second while typing this. But the euphoric high of finally hitting 100k for the first time can only be compared to that of passing my board exam last month.

What a better way to remember an amazing colleague and friend than cycling all the way to Laufenburg with her —a pintoresque medieval town by the Rhine split between Switzerland and Germany—, and devouring a 3-scoop ice cream for lunch (first one of the season!) on a scorching hot spring day.

To Geiersnest (a.k.a. Best Ride Evah)

It all started with an innocent text.

Are we still on for that bike ride after work?

What is up with all those rhetorical questions of obvious answers? Because I'm not a quitter. But when I was met with a candid smile and his casual “It's a 800m climb”, a part of me kinda wished I were.
Oh look at the time. Oh, my legs hurt because of the 70 k I did yesterday. I think it will rain soon. I forgot to feed my hamster.
Instead, I nodded and went with it. Needless to say I couldn't really accurately appreciate what 800m actually looked like.

Half an hour later, we were dodging disseminated goat crap on the road just like playing bike Minecraft. It was not easy to focus on anything other than the 2m right ahead of us, my heaving breathing and my heart pumping like a Drum and Bass beat.
Racing heart and legs on fire, I was semi-oblivious to how the most gorgeous Schwarzwald landscape was slowly (as in 6 km/h slowly) but surely unfolding in front of us.

After a (very steep) wrong turn, two peanut protein bars and half a bottle of water we finally made it to the parking lot on top of Geiersnest.

Oh. My. Word.

Wide eyes. Jaw drop. Beaming smiles. Just as bright as the breathtaking sunset taking place right before our eyes ―behind luscious pine trees, golden hills, puffy clouds, a wide horizon to France and beyond.

It's always good to bring someone here for the first time and see their reaction.

Absolute bliss. Monday feeling instantly replaced by weekend ―no, holiday feeling.
Like stepping into a fantasy world, escaping reality, entering a dream where dim light, nature sounds and warm, scented summer breeze envelope everything.

And the way back down left nothing to be desired.
Speed. Alternating currents of cool and warm air against my skin. Crossing paths with the last brave cyclist still fighting against the mountains as we had been an hour before.

Freiburg greeted us back with the first artificial lights against a purple sky right after Blue Hour.

It wasn't my legs hurting this time. But my face from smiling.

A good friend, my favorite bike and a gorgeous landscape.
Perfect recipe to start feeling like myself again.

And goat poo stuck to my tires to prove it.